De Grafiek 2004-2011 van de Prijs van het Huis van de V.S.


Archief voor Categorie de van de „Daadwerkelijke Prijzen van het Huis“

Van Canada abcp- reddingsplan in probleem?

Zondag, 23 Maart, 2008

Het lot van een $32 miljard reddingsplan voor de rust van de het commercieel-papiermarkt van Canada in de handen van een teruggetrokken varkenslandbouwer, pastor en andere individuele investeerders houden van Layne Arthur.

Arthur, dat $434.000 in handelspapier heeft dat sinds Augustus bevroren is, is van plan om het voorstel te verwerpen omdat hij niet bereid is om zijn recht op te geven te vervolgen om zijn geld spoediger terug te krijgen. Onder overeenkomst bereikte Maandag, 30 - aan 90 dag zal de schuld in nieuwe nota's worden omgezet die zo laat zoals 2017 rijpen.

„ik ga vervolgen,“ bovengenoemd Arthur, 52, die opbrengst van de verkoop van zijn landbouwbedrijf van Alberta op advies van makelaar Canaccord Capital Inc. investeerden „Ik wil al mijn geldrug; u kunt niet somebody verkopen iets en dan niet op het product leveren.“

Ongeveer 1.400 cliėnten Canaccord houden collectief $269 miljoen van het bevroren handelspapier in hun rekeningen, volgens de makelarij. Zijn belangrijkst werkend ambtenarenTeken Maybank gisteren bovengenoemd in een telefoongesprek het werkt aan een „hulpprogramma“ voor cliėnten.
„Wij hebben niet de capaciteit of de hoofdbasis om het direct van onze cliėnten op te kopen,“ hij zei, van Ixtapa, Mexico.

„Ik ben optimistisch dat wij het succesvolle herstructureren gaan kunnen posten, om marktdeelnemers, potentiėle kopers te identificeren wie kunnen werken wij met om op de behoeften van onze cliėnten gericht te zijn.“
De investeerders zoals Arthur, die een universitaire student, energiestafmedewerkers en een teruggetrokken vluchtbediende omvatten, hebben de bevoegdheid om de grootste schuld die van Canada te kelderen als zij tegen het voorstel stemmen herstructureert.

Het plan vereist de steun van een meerderheid van noteholders, die van hun recht op gerechtelijke stappen moeten afstand doen.
Noteholders zal worden gevraagd om over het herstructureren van door activa ondersteund document op 25 April in Toronto, de commissie te stemmen verantwoordelijk voor laat gisteren bovengenoemd herstructureren. Elke houder zal één stem hebben.

Onder Canadese faillissementsregels, de meer dan 1.500 individuen en minstens 100 bedrijven en geldmanagers die het handelspapier bezitten.
„Wij willen vermijden hebbend noteholders verdragen meer angst dan noodzakelijk is,“ de bovengenoemde advocaat Purdy Crawford van Toronto, die bijna zeven maanden bewerkend het pact doorbracht en nu van plan is om investeerders in vijf steden te ontmoeten om het te verkopen. Het „alternatief voor dit plan is de liquidatie van wat of alle buizen, die zoals ik heb gezegd zouden leiden tot wezenlijke verliezen.“

A defeat of the planmay lead to a collapse of $32 billion in asset-backed paper, which is also held by some of the biggest pension funds and lenders such as the National Bank of Canada.
Some individual investors say the Crawford plan leaves them with two unappealing options: recover most of their money when the notes mature within nine years.

Or they can try to sell the debt once trading begins, assuming the plan is approved. The debt may trade at 60 cents to 80 cents on the dollar because of the decline in credit markets, according to analysts.

Murray Candlish, 51, a retired hog farmer in Daysland, Alta., says he can’t wait nine years to get his $350,000 investment back.
“We trusted these people to put our savings into something that was safe”.

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Last Chance - Mom and Dad?

Friday, March 21st, 2008

From Yahoo.com

After being laid off from her job as an events planner at an upscale resort, Jo Ann Bauer struggled financially. She worked at several lower-paying jobs, relocated to a new city and even declared bankruptcy.

Then in December, she finally accepted her parents’ invitation to move into their home — at age 52. “I’m back living in the bedroom that I grew up in,” she said.
Taking shelter with parents isn’t uncommon for young people in their 20s, especially when the job market is poor. But now the slumping economy and the credit crunch are forcing some children to do so later in life — even in middle age.

Financial planners report receiving many calls from parents seeking advice about taking in their grown children following divorces and layoffs.

Kim Foss Erickson, a financial planner in Roseville, Calif., north of Sacramento, said she has never seen older children, even those in their 50s, depending so much on their parents as in the last six months.

“This is not like, ‘OK, my son just graduated from college and needs to move back in’ type of thing,” she said. “These are 40- and 50-year-old children of my clients that they’re helping out.”
Parents “jeopardize their financial freedom by continuing to subsidize their children,” said Karin Maloney Stifler, a financial planner in Hudson, Ohio, and a board member of the Financial Planning Association. “We have a hard time saying no as a culture to our children, and they keep asking for more.”

Bauer’s parents won’t take rent money or let her help much with groceries. She’s trying to save several hundred dollars a month for a house while working as a meetings coordinator.

Editor:

This story will be repeated in countless Familes.

Sadly, we have many Boomers and Echo Boomers that are totally broke and will never be able to grab a high paying job - again.

The difference in this downturn, as opposed to other ‘Depressions’, is that folks have no savings, they have maxed credit cards, their home is losing value so fast that they can’t get any more lines of credit - food prices are skyrocketing, taxes are going parabolic, services are being cut, jobs are being slashed, student loans are harder to get, retail is stalling, and the endless War in Iraq is costing TRILLIONS of dollars.

Happy Days are here again.

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Mortgage lenders tighten standards.

Friday, March 21st, 2008

Just when consumers and the U.S. economy need banks to lend more freely, the mortgage industry is making it harder to borrow — even for those with good credit.

Mortgage insurers, whose backing is required for borrowers who can’t afford the traditional 20% down payment on a home, have already flagged nearly a quarter of the nation’s ZIP codes where they refuse to insure some home loans.
That encompasses a wide variety of neighborhoods: McMansions in Scottsdale, Ariz.; luxury Miami condos; 1960 ranch houses in Flint, Mich.; and early 20th century kit homes in Metuchen, N.J.

The entire states of California, Florida, Arizona, Michigan, Ohio and Nevada — which have seen the highest foreclosure rates and the worst price declines — are blackballed on some mortgage insurers’ lists.

Banks that have lost billions because of bad bets during the housing boom are now reverting to strict lending standards not seen in nearly 20 years, according to industry data and interviews with lenders.
For new home buyers and those seeking to refinance, it can mean higher down payments and a higher bar for credit scores, among other requirements. The toughest restrictions are in markets where home prices are falling, though regions where property values are rising are not immune.
“We’re in the midst of an epic, broad, sweeping change in the mortgage industry,” said Chris Sipe, a loan officer with America East Mortgage in Frederick, Md.

The reluctance to extend credit comes despite a flurry of government initiatives, including steady interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, intended to make it easier for would-be borrowers and those facing interest-rate resets on their mortgages.
Lenders’ growing leeriness threatens to dampen sellers’ already soggy prospects for the spring home-buying season — and that means more pain for the already battered housing sector and the broader economy.

In recent weeks, mortgage insurers have flagged more than 9,600 ZIP codes in at least 34 states where they won’t insure certain types of home loans — those for investment properties or second homes, those with riskier adjustable-rate or interest-only mortgages, or for buyers making down payments of less than 3%.

Editor:

This is a TRAGIC blunder that will only hasten the demise of the U.S. economy.
JUST as people need some breathing room - the oxygen is shut off.
All those people that actually WANT to buy a home, could now be out of the market - and lending even more losses and NON-SALES to the horrid numbers we already have.

The unemployment stats are about to go through the ROOF, as job creation is going to drop off a cliff.

The impact on NYC - and the downturn in the Financial Industry will kill off thousands of jobs.

Just the lost jobs at Bear Stearns will be a crippling hit to the Big Apple’s bottom line.

31% of GDP of NYC is dependent on the paper shufflers in the Financial Sector.

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FLASH - Citi Draws emergency funds

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Citigroup said Thursday it will use its $7.3 billion in unsecured U.S. bank credit facilities to repay debt maturing this year.

The funds will also be used to provide financing to its core commercial franchises, it said. CIT will continue to actively seek additional funds and explore and execute on the sale of non-strategic assets and business lines.

“Our decision today is a result of the protracted disruption in the capital markets as well as recent actions by the rating agencies,” said Chief Executive Jeffrey M. Peek.

More….

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Citigroup advises - The Great Unwind has begun

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

The Great Unwind has begun, Citigroup Inc. strategists warned on Wednesday.

As markets and economies de-leverage across the globe, investors should avoid companies and countries that have grown to rely too much on borrowed money, they said.

That means favoring public-equity markets over hedge funds, private-equity and real estate, while leaning toward emerging market countries and away from developed nations like the U.S., the bank’s global equity strategy team advised.

Within equity markets, the financial-services should be avoided because it’s still over-leveraged, while other companies have stronger balance sheets, the strategists said.
“Steady growth, low inflation and rock-bottom interest rates encouraged economic and financial participants across the world economy to gear up over the past few years,” Robert Buckland and his colleagues on Citi’s global strategy team wrote in a note to clients. “Easy money encouraged many to buy a bigger house, a bigger car or a bigger speculative position.”

“But now, any behavior that relied upon continued access to easy money is being dramatically reassessed,” they added. “Leveraged banks must lend less, leveraged consumers must consume less, leveraged companies must acquire or invest less, and leveraged speculators must speculate less.”

Financial-services companies are the most vulnerable to this reduction of borrowed money across the globe, they said.
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Talking down the UK Market - Rumors abound

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

In a rare move to calm investors’ nerves, British financial authorities stepped forward on Wednesday to quench a string of “unfounded rumors” that had sent some financial stocks in London into a tailspin.

The Financial Services Authority said it had started an investigation into whether some traders spread rumors about British financial institutions over the last few days and might have profited from the decline in the stocks’ share prices. Separately, the Bank of England, which almost never makes public statements about specific lenders, denied rumors that it met or scheduled to meet with executives at a British bank to discuss potential liquidity problems.

The twin moves come days after the U.S. central bank’s extraordinary rescue of Bear Stearns and illustrates the lengths authorities are going to on both sides of the Atlantic to prevent a crisis of confidence in the financial sector from spiraling out of control. A day after Wall Street soared in response to a Federal Reserve interest rate cut, markets in Europe and the United States fell again, with the Dow Jones industrial average down 1.6 percent in afternoon trading.

“It reveals how nervous the authorities are that rumors can actually bring serious problems to a financial institution,” said Alistair Milne, senior lecturer at Cass Business School in London.

( Editor - check out Naked Shorting and other nasty practices - some really hard edged trading going on, methinks).

Trading rooms were buzzing with rumors Wednesday morning that HBOS, the largest mortgage lender in Britain, was in trouble. The speculation had wiped about £3 billion, or $6 billion, off its market value before the Edinburgh-based lender could deny them, saying it had “ready access” to funding.

The pound was badly hit on Wednesday following rumours that HBOS could be in financial difficulty as well as speculation that the Bank of England may cut interest rates next month rather than in May.

Bank of England policymakers voted 7-2 to freeze interest rates at 5.25 percent earlier this month, minutes of their meeting showed.

The BoE’s nine-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) opted to leave its key lending rate unchanged at the meeting on March 5-6 after a quarter-point reduction the previous month.

The minutes, alongside market turmoil and continued credit constraints, mean the BoE is likely to come under increased pressure to cut rates sooner rather than later.

Also weighing on the pound were labour market data which showed a smaller-than-expected drop in jobless numbers.

“The greatly increased risk of a 25 basis point base rate cut to 5.0 percent next month following today’s dovish minutes, and softer-than-expected unemployment and earnings, is helping underpin euro/sterling” said Robert Howard, analyst at Thomson IFR Markets.

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Thornburg needs CASH - NOW

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

One of America’s biggest home loan providers, Thornburg Mortgage, needs to raise nearly $1bn over the next seven business days in order to keep its creditors at bay.

The New Mexico-based firm defaulted on $610m (£307m) in margin calls from lenders earlier this month and has been teetering on the brink of becoming the next American financial company to fall victim of the global credit crunch.

It has struck a conditional deal with five creditors for a further $5.8bn of financing - but the agreement depends on Thornburg raising $948m from other sources over the next seven days.
The five banks holding the keys to Thornburg’s future are Royal Bank of Scotland, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, UBS and the troubled institution Bear Stearns.

Thornburg’s chief executive, Larry Goldstone, said the conditional agreement illustrated a “high degree of confidence” from lenders in “the superiority of our origination franchise, the quality of our assets and the strength of our management team”.
Thornburg, which has 20,000 clients, specialises in so-called jumbo mortgages for large homes at the higher end of the market. These have come under threat as the sub-prime mortgage crisis has spread to the broader property market.

Founded in 1993, Thornburg’s shares were trading at $28 a year ago. They plunged in August on liquidity concerns which the company initially appeared to have survived. But problems re-emerged this month when Thornburg re-stated a fourth-quarter profit as a loss, taking a $676m charge to cover a fall in the value of its portfolio.

Thornburg’s shares sank by $1.26 to $1.72 on Wednesday. Chairman Garrett Thornburg is being hit personally in the pocket - he has spent more than $14m on shares over the last year.
The company follows a series of other American mortgage providers which have run into difficulty. The country’s biggest home loans firm, Countrywide Financial, was taken over by Bank of America in January.

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Gold gets HAMMERED and CAD tanks.

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

The Canadian dollar tumbled more than 2 full cents (U.S.) to below parity with the U.S. greenback Wednesday, swept up in the selling on commodity and stock markets.

“Commodities have been the one bright spot for Canada,” said Steve Butler, director of foreign-exchange trading at Scotia Capital Inc. “The drop in commodities has spurred some people to rethink their positions and we have seen some pretty aggressive selling of the Canadian dollar today. Personally, I am surprised we did not weaken sooner.”

The loonie, which fell substantially in the last hours of North American equity trading, finished the volatile session at 98.49 cents, down 2.19 cents from $1.0068 on Tuesday.

The sharp drop came as the price of crude oil plunged nearly $5 a barrel to $104.48 while gold futures plummeted $59 an ounce, their biggest drop on record according to Bloomberg, to below $1,000 an ounce.

Canada’s benchmark equity index sank 427 points amid steep losses in the metal, mining, material, gold and energy sectors.

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Northern Rock to cut 2,000 jobs

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Northern Rock has said it will cut about 2,000 jobs and reduce its residential mortgage lending by half.

The job cuts, which account for about a third of its staff, will be made by 2011 under plans to turn around the ailing bank’s fortunes.

The Newcastle bank was nationalised in February after the credit crisis forced it to seek a Bank of England lifeline, to fund its mortgage loan book.

Northern Rock must pay back the Bank of England loans worth about £25bn.

The bank needs European regulators to approve its rescue plan, and the EU Commission has began examining details of Northern Rock’s proposals.

Under EU rules, public support can be allowed to stop firms from going bankrupt, but long-term government aid that is seen to undermine competition is not allowed.

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What will it take to calm the markets?

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

After months of wrenching upheaval in financial markets, the system hasn’t self-destructed but it also hasn’t stabilized.

What will it take?

With the nation now very likely in a recession, that’s become an important question not just for bankers and policymakers, but for everyday workers and consumers.

Many signposts will mark the path forward, economists say, but they cite two crucial steps policymakers must make. First: Ensure that the current uncertainty about the value of houses is resolved, which will also help investors discover the now-uncertain value of mortgage-linked investments. Second: Prevent chaos from engulfing the financial system while that housing adjustment is taking place.

More….

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