Archive for April, 2008

Apparel Industry Keeps Watch on Wall Street’s Financial Crisis

Friday, April 25th, 2008
dresscloth asked:


FROM:apparelnews

Could Wall Street be the Grinch that stole Christmas?

With dire financial news a daily occurrence, retailers and apparel manufacturers are wondering what the holiday season has in store for them.

http://www.himfr.com/buy-reebok_cap/”>reebok capThe current economic downturn grew worse on Sept. 15, when investment bank Lehman Bros. Holdings Inc. became the biggest company to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Barclays, the third-largest British bank, bought Lehman’s U.S. operations.

Soon, Bank of America Corp. announced it was acquiring troubled brokerage firm Merrill Lynch & Co., in hot water for losing large sums from mortgage-related debt. And the U.S. government gave the world’s largest insurer, American International Group Inc., an $85 billion bailout.

Now everyone is taking stock of their investment portfolio, jobs and mortgages to figure out where they stand. Even if consumers are on fairly solid ground, bad financial news breeds concern among shoppers starting to make up their holiday lists.

“Consumer psychology plays a very important part this time of year. If consumers are scared about the economy, it will clearly limit their spending,” said Scott Krugman, a spokesperson for the National Retail Federation, a retail trade group headquartered in Washington, D.C.

He noted that shoppers were shy to spend during this year’s Back-to-School season, when retail sales increased only 1.1 percent in August compared with the same month last year. So the holiday season isn’t looking particularly bright. “The [tax] stimulus checks helped a little bit, giving consumers more financial flexibility,” Krugman said. “But it was clear that consumers were holding back.”

In addition, luxury goods are no longer a safe harbor.

John Arguelles, president of Lloyd Klein, said the couture collection created by designer Lloyd Klein and sold at the company’s store in Los Angeles experienced a sluggish season after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the ensuing recession in 2001. He expects the same thing now.

“A lot of our clients have an assessed wealth based on the value of their holdings. If their holdings value drops, they feel poor, and if people feel poor, they spend less,” he said.

He said this may not affect the woman who buys a $200 dress, but the customer who shops for couture wear selling for $2,000 to $10,000 pulls in her purse strings.

“People are scared to death,” said Sunnie Kim, president and chief executive of Hana Financial Inc., which serves the apparel and textile industries in Southern California. “Therefore, consumers will continue to do without nonessentials, which in turn will continue to stall the economy in general.”

Esmael Adibi, director of the Anderson Center for Economic Research at Chapman University in Orange Calif., said he believes consumer spending will be much lower for the next two to three quarters, meaning it won’t pick up before next spring. “All of us, in one way or another, are exposed to the equity market, and the fact that prices are collapsing means the value of our holdings is declining,” he said. “It is the negative wealth effect. If you feel you aren’t as wealthy as before, you spend less.”

However, Ike Zekaria, co-owner of Windsor, the Southern California–based juniors clothing chain with 43 stores in 13 states, is a little more optimistic. He said his customers are more oblivious to the economic downturn because they are only 18 to 25 years old. “They are not tied in to what is happening with interest rates, loans and the ability to get a loan,” he observed. “But no one seems to have an answer for the future. Everyone is being urged to stay the course, stay calm and do the same thing you were doing.”

Apparel manufacturers have several things to worry about. A slump in consumer demand obviously means fewer orders. But credit is likely to get tighter, too.

“For those companies that are in a stronger financial position, credit is still available,” said Steven Reiner, managing director of the West Coast office for investment banking firm Financo Inc. “But for the broader group of companies, credit may come from a nontraditional source, such as a hedge fund, and might be more expensive.”

Jeffrey Van Sinderen, a retail analyst in the Los Angeles office of B. Riley & Co., said everyone will be affected by the credit crunch. “I think it affects everybody, from the wholesalers to the retailers right down to the average consumer, because today it is harder to get a loan than a week ago,” he said. “The terms are probably going to be less attractive. You may have to have more assets if you are a company or cash flow to be able to qualify for certain kinds of loans.”

Also, factors that give loans based on accounts receivable are being more cautious, scrutinizing retailers to make sure they are credit-worthy. “They are keeping a very close eye on everyone,” Zekaria said.

Mergers and acquisitions is another area with a few speed bumps. With less credit to acquire companies, deals may be slow to mature or could fall to the wayside until later.

“For a good 18 months, mergers and acquisitions have gotten much more difficult,” Van Sinderen said. “The LBOs [leveraged buyouts using debt to acquire a company] are not happening. It is going to be harder and harder to do deals.”

However, for anyone with a ton of cash, now might be the time to pick up a bargain. “Where there is turmoil, there is tremendous opportunity,” said Ken Wengrod, president of FTC Commercial Corp. in Los Angeles, which works with fashion companies.

One business-investment advisor, who wished to remain anonymous, said he was working on several deals for Chinese investors to buy apparel companies or retailers. But the company owners were balking at the low offers. “I had three people call me in the last two days, all saying they’d now take the offer. But it’s too late for that. The buyers have dropped their price by 25 percent.”

 



Eric

help me understand the “wall street economy/bankrupt problem so that i can understand it. (7th grade level)?

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008
joanrock37 asked:


what is this whole wall street problem.
i have to summarize it for a current events thing tomorrow;
i cant understand any of the news sites or headlines, so can anyone PLEASE give me an updated explanation so that a 7th grader canunderstand it.
PLZ include from the beginning of problem to todays headlines,
THANKS SOOO MUCH!

Louise

Real Estate Good News

Monday, April 21st, 2008
Tony Barns asked:


Sales of existing homes last month rose for the first time in half a year, adding fresh evidence that the housing cycle may finally be bottoming out after nearly three years of correction. The national gains in resale’s announced on Monday were 2.8 percent for single family homes and 3.7 percent for condominiums. Total sales hit 5.03 million units, though Wall Street economists had predicted another decline to a consensus estimate of around 4.8 million units. The latest sales gains were created by a decline in the national median price of homes sold which is down by 8.2 percent.

You might think an 8 percent drop in prices is terrible. But let’s face it: The only way we’re going to burn off that 10-month overhang of unsold houses on the market is through more affordable, more realistic prices pulling buyers off the sidelines. There’s another factor at work pulling down the national median number: Relatively more houses are selling in places like Texas, North Carolina and Utah, where prices are moderate and affordable, while there are relatively fewer sales in ultra-high-cost California.

So the median price may be lower, but it’s not just because home values across the country are crashing. The mix is different, so the median price is a lower number. Low-cost mortgage money is also definitely helping to fire up sales. Average 30-year rates declined to 5.875 percent last week and any time mortgage money is under 6 percent, you’re going to see more home buying.

Sales in California are likely to improve in the coming months as the new “super-jumbo” FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages start hitting the street. FHA’s mortgages should be especially popular in California, where the median home price in some local areas like San Francisco exceeds $700,000. Thanks to FHA’s low 3 percent minimum down payment requirement, Californians should be able to buy a $700,000 house with just $21,000 down and walk away with a 6.5 percent 30-year fixed rate.



Carol

Who here is for the Wall Street Financial Rescue, “Bail Out”, Plan and who is against it?

Sunday, April 20th, 2008
Habitual Y/A Q&A Offender asked:


Please explain why you are for or against it and how you may feel about your Senators, Congressman or Presidential Candidate being either for or against it. From what I have seen reported on the news both McCain and Obama are for it.

Bradley

When wall street goes down how does that effect us?

Saturday, April 19th, 2008
Just wanna know asked:


its been on the news and Im a bit worried for America.

Renee

Who Else Wants Up-To-Date Forex News?

Thursday, April 17th, 2008
anonymous asked:


From coast to coast, and worldwide, Forex is the leading provider of financial analysis for the everyday consumer as well as major corporations. Forex news provides information on a number of different levels. Its easy to use homepage helps answer any questions to all inquiring minds that work in the arena of the financial markets of the world. If you are a person that is a mover and a shaker, you need a website that will have important data at the tips of your fingers. After visiting their website, and accessing the news, you will have to look no further.

Forex news understands how important Wall Street really is and because of that they have included that currency market in an easy to use toolbar. Other features on the net, includes news and analysis regarding your traded compiled at all times of the day. The easy to use systems can also provide audio so that you can set the computer to rattle off the day’s information leaving you free to tend to other issues. Vital announcements are also readily available, allowing for lightning fast reaction to news, and not just any news, but forex news. Another feature of the site is the “articles and ideas” section to help kick-start that brain of yours to think outside the box, and there is an insights portion which will link you to an industry professional’s view on future market trends.

The global calendar allows for fluctuations in the market to be monitored and interpreted by the consumer. Forex news doesn’t just simply regurgitate information; it dissects crucial material in the marketplace and hands it to the traders on an easy to use web site. This handy guide, channels imperative reports on the current week and gives a snapshot view of key economic events happening in the country as well as worldwide. From stocks, to home investment news, forex news has got what you need.

Some forex news features that have been now added to the site include: threaded forum, classic thread, and Forex chat. These have been included to help the user to receive all the know-how and expertise needed in our ever growing and changing financial world. Today’s financial analysts are looking for the best edge in order to contend against growing competition, and now you have to look no further. Forex news will provide all of the information you need and more.



Jason

Wall Lighting - Inside and Outside

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008
Barbara Tobiasz asked:


It was a Tuesday morning in upper Midwest. I was just rising from a good night’s sleep. I happen to be an early morning riser and it’s 4:30AM. I’m down in my kitchen having my first cup of coffee and preparing for the day ahead.

I turn on my TV to get a glimpse of the morning news and weather report. After about 15 minutes, I turn off the TV and head upstairs to take a shower.

Now I’m ready to attack the day. The first thing I do is go to my office and turn on my computer. After my computer has booted up, I go to my email to sort through my messages.

What a pleasant surprise. I got a message from one of my recent subscribers to my e-letter. Her name is Ann. She is from New England and she is asking me for help in finding her some inside and outside wall lighting for her home.

Anyway, Ann is from Connecticut and owns a Contemporary Colonial Home built in 1984. She has recently taken inventory on her home and has done some remodeling in her kitchen and 3 bathrooms. She said as she was doing an inspection of her home to see what could be replaced. She noticed that there were several wall lighting fixtures both inside and outside her home that should be replaced with new more appealing fixtures.

The first of these wall lighting fixtures that needed replacement were in her formal dining room. She went on to say that the dining room walls are light yellow wallpaper with a small flower print placed close together dotting the entire surface of the wallpaper. In the middle of one wall is a rust and dark brown brick fireplace with tan mortar in between the brick, running half way up the wall. The width of the brick fireplace was about 7 feet.

She also said that there is a formal dining room table made of solid oak, with oak chairs that are cushioned with padded brown leather covers both on the seats and back rests. There is a candelabra chandelier in polished brass above the dining room table.

On the innermost wall of the dining room was a custom made buffet cabinet. This buffet cabinet was 15 feet long. Above the buffet cabinet are 5 wall lighting fixtures equally separated on the wall. Each one of these wall lighting fixtures was a 2 candle electric wall sconce.

Ann goes on to say that she would like to change out these electric candle wall sconces to something more contemporary and artful.

Right away I’m thinking let’s go with something in a contemporary brass. After searching around, I found a wall lighting fixture that will create a vibrant ambiance in her formal dining room. It’s a beautiful wall sconce in a new brass finish. This dynamic wall lighting fixture is a magnificent work of art. The contemporary brass base holds a marbled amber stone shade. This unusual stone shade will fill the room with the hues of rainbow colors while adding extra allure to your room that will leave your visitors in awe. The colors range from a soft, pale sunshine yellow to deep rich honey golden amber.

Then I thought that there are 5 lights along that wall. It would truly look magnificent if the second and forth light were different from the others. So I considered many combinations and came up with what I thought would be the perfect compliment. The other two lights on her dining room wall would be the two light Tiffany wall sconces in Valiant Bronze. This stained glass lighting fixture incorporates the use of warm earth tones and geometric shapes to create a fixture that is both comforting yet inventive.

Next, Ann wanted to change her outside wall lighting around her house. She had a three car attached garage, There was one double overhead door and one single overhead door.

There are three wall lighting fixtures on this wall. She had mentioned that she was looking for large outdoor lighting fixtures in a silver metal finish.

My suggestion to Ann was a clean new look. I chose the 27th Street outdoor wall fixture in satin etched nickel. This outdoor wall lighting fixture has a modern clean appearance that will never go out of style. I also suggested that she use this same wall lighting fixture for the wall light by her front door and on the back wall of her home where she has a deck.

When it comes to indoor or outdoor wall lighting, your choices are unlimited. From styles to finishes, from sizes to shapes you will never run out of possibilities. One thing you can be sure of, is, that there is a wall lighting fixture to brighten every possible decorating theme.



Willie

Quarterly Window Dressing - A Recurrent Wall Street Scam

Thursday, April 10th, 2008
Steve Selengut asked:


“The time has come the walrus said, to talk of many things”: Of corrections–portfolios— and window dressing— of market cycles— wizards— and reality.

Quarterly portfolio window dressing is one of many immortal Jaberwock-like creatures that roam the granite canyons of the Manhattan triangle, sending inappropriate signals to unwary investors and media spokespersons. Many of you, like the unsuspecting young oysters in the Lewis Carroll classic, are responding to the daily news nonsense with fear instead of embracing the new opportunities that are surely right there, cloaked, just beyond your short-term vision field.

Older and wiser mollusks who have experienced the cyclical realities of the markets tend to stick with proven strategies that are based on a solid foundation of QDI (quality, diversification, and income production). They know that corrections lead to rallies, and that rallies always give way to corrections. If only the corrections could elicit patience instead of fear; if only rallies didn’t produce greed and excess. There’s a lot of confusion in a world that considers commodities safer instruments than corporate bonds.

Long lasting investment portfolios are consciously asset allocated between high quality income and equity securities. Each class of securities is then diversified properly to mitigate the risk that the failure of a single security issuer will bring down the entire enterprise. Simply put, a portfolio with 100% invested in the absolute, hands-down, best company on the planet is a high-risk portfolio. There is no cure for cyclical changes in security market values— diversified portfolios thrive on it, in the long run.

The differences between a correction in either a market (equity or debt) or a market sector (financials, drugs, transportation, etc.), and a fall from grace in a specific company are important to appreciate. Corrections are broad downward movements that affect nearly all securities in a specific market. This particular one has impacted prices in both investment markets, while creating rallies in more speculative arenas. Ten years ago, the dot-com bubble began under very similar circumstances. Ten years earlier, it was interest rates— and on, and on. When all prices are down, opportunity is at hand.

There are approximately 450 Investment Grade Value Stocks, and at least half are down significantly from their 52-week highs; fewer than ten per cent were in this condition just over a year ago. But very few companies have thrown in the towel, or even cut their dividends. Closed end income fund prices are still well below the levels they commanded when interest rates were much higher, yet they provide the same cash flow as before the financial crises. The economy and the markets have been through much worse.

Why aren’t the wizards of Wall Street assuaging our nerves by explaining the cyclical nature of the markets and pointing out that similar crises have always preceded the attainment of new all time highs? Right, because the unhappy investor is Wall Street’s best friend. Why can’t politicians address economic problems with capitalist-economic solutions? Fear, and the panic it evokes, creates an easy market for walruses, oyster knives in hand.

Wall Street plays to the operative emotion of the day— greed in the commodities markets and fear in the others. Once per quarter, they trim their holdings in unpopular sectors and add to their positions in areas that have strengthened. Under current conditions in the traditional investment arena, don’t be surprised by larger than usual cash holdings (certainly not “Smart Cash”). Window dressing pushes the prices of your holdings lower, in spite of their continued income production and sustained quality ratings.

How have the wizards managed to re-define the long-term investment process as a quarterly horse race against indices and averages that have no relationship to investor goals, objectives, or portfolio content? Why do these proponents of long-term investment planning and thinking religiously conspire to make short-term decisions that prey upon the emotional weaknesses of their clients? The “art of looking smart” window-dressing exercise accomplishes several things in correcting markets:

The things you own are artificially manipulated lower in price to make you even more uncomfortable with them, while the things you don’t have positions in stabilize or move higher. The glossies from the new fund family your advisor is talking about show no holdings in any of the current areas of weakness. It’s easy to make fearful investors change positions and/or strategies. Sic ‘em boys. Brilliant!

Value investors (those who invest in IGVSI stocks, and income securities with an unbroken cash flow track record) may lapse into fearful thinking as well, and this is where the Working Capital Model comes to the rescue. By focusing on the purpose of the securities you own, their enhanced attractiveness at lower prices becomes obvious. Higher yields at lower market valuations and more shares at lower prices equal faster realized profits as the numbers move higher during the next upward movement of the cycle. That’s just the way it is. A reality you can count on.

Surprisingly few investors have the courage to take advantage of market corrections. Even more surprising is how reluctant the most respected institutional walruses are to suggest buying when prices are low. The instant gratification expectation of investors combined with the infallibility expected of professionals, by both the media and their employers, is the cause. Gurus are expected to know what, when, and how much. Consequently, they prefer to manipulate their portfolios to create an illusion of past brilliance, rather than taking the chance that they may actually be in the right position a few quarters down the road. There is no know in investing.

The stock market yard sale is in full swing— add to your retirement accounts, buy more of IGVSI stocks at bargain prices, increase your dependable income and increase current yields at the same time. Apply patience, and vote for economic solutions to economic problems.

Perge’



Dale

Climbing a Wall of Worry! Dec. 12, 2008

Sunday, April 6th, 2008
Sy Harding asked:


EET SMART

___________________

Sy Harding

CLIMBING A WALL OF WORRY! Dec. 12, 2008.

The largest sectors of the economy continue to plunge into a seemingly bottomless hole; the housing industry (where it all started), the financial sector still locked in a credit crisis, the giant auto industry possibly within weeks of major bankruptcies, retailers struggling in their worst holiday season in decades.

Almost three million jobs have been lost since the recession began last December, more in the last six months than in the entire 2001-2002 recession. The loss of 533,000 jobs in November was the largest monthly decline since December 1974.

Investors have lost several $trillions in savings and investments in the worst bear market in stocks in 75 years. Income yields on bonds are at unbelievable lows.

Headline making scandals are showing up all over the place. The Governor of Illinois trying to sell his influence, even the former senate seat of President-elect Obama. Bernard Madoff, a former chairman of the Nasdaq Stock Market, and a respected Wall Street presence for almost 50 years, arrested and charged with fraud, in what the SEC is calling a $50 billion ‘Ponzi-scheme’ swindle of investors, “a stunning fraud that appears to be of epic proportions”.

Is it any wonder that the confidence of consumers and investors is also in a deep dark hole?

And it is. Over the last three months fearful investors have pulled a record amount of money out of mutual funds, brokerage accounts, and even hedge funds, in a panicked rush to get out of the stock market. Recent polls show a surprising percentage of investors and consumers now don’t even believe that money in government insured savings accounts or money market-funds is safe, and have been piling into short-term U.S. Treasury bills at a pace that has dropped the yield on T-Bills close to zero. They are willing to loan their money to the government for nothing rather than risk it anywhere else.

What is going on reminds me of a remark attributed to J.P. Morgan back in the early 1900’s that, “Bear markets return stocks to their rightful owners”. By that he meant that smart money or ‘rightful owners’ sell their stocks temporarily to public investors at high prices near market tops, but then buy them back at low prices when investors bail out at the lows of the subsequent bear markets.

What is going on reminded me of his arrogant remark because, while public investors have been bailing out at such a frenzied pace over the last couple of months, others have been quietly buying so heavily that not only did it offset all that selling, but was sufficient to produce a gain of 20.8% by the S&P 500 from its November low to its high last week.

The volatility has continued, but in the process the market has been in a bullish pattern of higher highs on the rallies and higher lows on the brief pullbacks.

And more importantly, it has been rallying in spite of the economic reports and worries becoming even more dismal and foreboding, including ugly employment numbers, plunging retail sales reports, threat of an auto industry bankruptcy, and soaring home foreclosure rates.

That is, for it three weeks anyway it has been climbing the proverbial ‘wall of worry’.

That is a good sign. As I have been saying for the last couple of months on my free daily blog, “The market always looks ahead and begins its next bull market while a recession is still underway and worsening, while public investors are at an extreme of pessimism. So obviously at some point it has to begin to rise in spite of continuing bad economic news. Since public investors aren’t buying, it has to be institutional and other ’smart money’ that begins to buy in anticipation of improving economic conditions six to nine months ahead. And the market has to continue to climb a wall of worry for quite some time, until the economy itself begins to recover and public investors become less fearful.”

As regular readers of my column know, all year this year I have been predicting that the stock market would not bottom until the October/November time-frame, and that the bottom would be followed by a substantial bear market rally that would be well worth going after. Nothing so far had disabused me of that expectation. With the S&P 500 down 52% at its October low it would take a gain of 104% to get back to its peak of last October. It would take more than a 50% gain to retrace half of that decline in a bear market rally.

Stay tuned!

Sy Harding publishes the financial website http://www.streetsmartreport.com/ and a free daily Internet blog at http://www.syhardingblog.com/. In 1999 he authored Riding The Bear – How To Prosper In the Coming Bear Market. His latest book is Beat the Market the Easy Way! – Proven Seasonal Strategies Double Market’s Performance!



Terri