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March unemployment rate edges down as employment rate stays steady

April 1, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – The economy added 216,000 jobs in March, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released Friday.

That is good news, but analysts say if the economy only creates 200,000 jobs monthly it would take about a decade to put everyone back to work who lost a job during the recession, because the economy needs to add from 120,000 to 200,000 jobs monthly to keep up with workers entering the labor force for the first time.

March job gains were mostly in professional and business services, health care, leisure and hospitality and mining. In addition, manufacturing employment continued its upward trend.

The unemployment rate edged down slightly to 8.8 percent and 13.5 million people are officially counted as unemployed. That 8.8 percent is down by 1.0 percentage point from November 2010.

However, the employment rate of 64.2 percent remained unchanged since February. When the economy is healthy, the employment rate runs at 89 percent or higher.

Unemployment rates for major worker groups did not show much change in March. The unemployment rate for adult men was 8.6 percent, for adult women it was 7.7 percent, while teenagers had a 24.5 percent rate. Overall, 7.9 percent of whites were unemployed, while the rate was 15.5 percent for blacks and 11.3 percent for Hispanics.

About 8.4 million people were involuntarily employed part time for economic reasons because either their hours were cut back or they were unable to find a full-time job. That number was little changed in March.

Nevertheless, the economy is still shedding jobs.

The number of job losers and persons who completed temporary jobs was little changed at 8.2 million for March. However, the 6.1 million people classified as long-term unemployed, because they have been jobless for 27 weeks or longer, rose from 43.9 percent in February to 45.5 percent in March.

Job losses are likely to continue. For example, employers in hard-hit Florida have given the state notices of planned mass layoffs through June that total 4,888 employees so far this year.

That includes jobs in some of the areas that the economy added jobs in March, such as professional and business services, health care and manufacturing. In addition, those mass layoffs affected workers in the retail, wholesale, financial services, education, transportation, administration, real estate and rental sectors.

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New Reverse Originator Emerges

March 17, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Reverse Mortgage Solutions Inc. announced it would expand into reverse mortgage originations. Business will be generated from a new retail channel. However, a correspondent channel has also been created.

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Egypt Keeps Its Stock Exchange Shuttered, Fearing Sell-Off, Capital Flight

March 16, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
The Media Line Staff

Cairo, Egypt (TML) – Husni Mubarak is gone and the mass protests at Tahrir Square are mostly history, but Egypt’s stock exchange remains closed – its trading floors empty and two tanks stationed outside its Cairo headquarters, serving as an all too conspicuous symbol of the country’s struggle to get back to business.

Officials have hinted repeatedly over the last few weeks that the market will open soon, most recently on Monday when Bloomberg News quoted exchange spokesman Hisham Turk and cabinet spokesman Magdy Raby as saying an announcement would come by the evening. As of late Tuesday, no announcement had been made and Turk was unavailable for comment.

“It’s an institution that is very public and visible. For it to be closed isn’t a positive sign. That’s why the opening of the stock market will be important. It provides a sense that the situation is returning to normal,” Angus Blair, head of research at the Cairo-based investment bank Beltone Financial, told The Media Line.

The Egyptian Exchange was shut January 27 as confrontations between the government and protestors unnerved investors and sent shares plummeting 17% in two trading sessions. But the army-led transitional government has since brought order to the country and economic activity has resumed.

Although the decision when to open and under what conditions is up to exchange officials, analysts say the government fears that resuming trading would give people a conduit for sending capital the country badly needs overseas. It could also send a bearish message about the economy if shares tumble in initial trading.

The authorities have taken some measures to address those issues. As of March 14, Egypt’s attorney-general has temporarily barred 52 people plus immediate family members in many cases, from trading shares. The list includes the Mubarak family, as well as top business people and former ministers.

To address concerns about a massive sell-off, Egypt’s Financial Service Supervisory Authority last Saturday eased rules for margin trading, the practice of buying securities with cash borrowed from a broker and using other securities as collateral. Investors now need only repay loans or add collateral when their debt reaches 70% of the shares’ value. That is 10 percentage points higher than previously.

To help small investors, who have been the most nervous about the fall-out of the exchange’s re-opening, a fund worth 250 million Egyptian pounds ($42 million) was formed on Sunday to offer them loans.

“We are getting close to a reopening in the sense that we are trying to ensure sufficient demand so that when the stock exchange opens there won’t be a strong crash. We expect a landing, but we want it to be a soft landing,” Egyptian Finance Minister Samir Radwan told the CNBC business television network on Monday. “I hope by mid week we will be functioning.”

Egypt lost several weeks worth of output during the peak of the unrest. Even today, strikes are frequent and two key sources of foreign income – tourism and the salaries of Egyptians working abroad – remain problem areas. Tourists are trickling back slowly, as travel to the Middle East suffers from unrest in places like Libya and Bahrain. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have fled Libya, depriving their families of income.

Radwan said last week that gross domestic product may grow as little as 3% in the year to the end of June if production does not get back on track. The economy grew by 5.1% in the 2009/10 financial year.

Meanwhile, stock markets across the Middle East have dropped in response to regional unrest. Globally, investors have been pulling out of emerging stock markets like Egypt’s. As of March 9, emerging-markets equity funds have suffered net withdrawals of more than $21 billion this year.

But there is some room for optimism. Shares of leading Egyptian stocks traded abroad in the form of global depository receipts have fallen since the exchange was shuttered, but they haven’t tanked. Orascom Construction Industries has shed 4.8%, Orascom Telecom 2.4%, EFG-Hermes 13.2% and Telecom Egypt 12.2%. “It’s not as bad as one would think,” said Beltone’s Blair.

Last Thursday, ratings agency Standard & Poor’s said it removed Egypt’s long-term foreign currency ratings from CreditWatch negative and affirmed its ratings of the country’s unsecured foreign currency sovereign debt.

Whether or not investors will look at the Egyptian cup as half full or half empty, the stock exchange faces something of a deadline from MSCI, whose securities index are used by global investors to benchmark their performance and decide how to apportion their investments.

Under MSCI rules, a market can’t be closed for more than 40 trading days, or it risks being expelled from the index. Frank Nielsen, MSCI’s executive director for equity and applied research, said this deadline was March 24. Expulsion would cause big institutions to divest their Egyptian stocks, although Nielsen declined to speculate on what the impact would be.

“What we are doing right now is talking to investors and other interested parties in Egypt and the rest of the world to get a sense of what investors feel about it, and what the plans are in Egypt,” Nielsen said in an interview on the Index Universe website. “Surely there will be an impact if we ultimately deleted Egypt from the Emerging Markets Index.”

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London police and Britain’s Serious Fraud Office raid Tchenguiz brothers over Icelandic bank collapse

March 12, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

London, England, United Kingdom (AHN) – Joint forces of the London police and Britain’s Serious Fraud Office raided the offices of two prominent London brothers over the collapse of Icelandic bank Kaupthing.

Robert Tchenguiz was the biggest client of the collapsed bank with a loan portfolio of about $2.1 billion (GBP 1.4 billion). He used the loans to invest in several large British companies, including restaurants and retailers.

The police also raided Vincent Tchenguiz brother’s office in Mayfair. Vincent was Robert’s business partner and also had loans with Kaupthing.

135 police officers and SFO investigators, blocked all elevators and prevented the other building tenants from entering the edifice.

Kaupthing was one of three Icelandic banks that collapsed during the global financial crisis in 2008.

160,000 British depositors failed to withdraw their money and the U.K. Treasury had to bail them out to the tune of $3.75 billion (GBP 2.5 billion).

According to a report of a truth commission to the Icelandic Parliament, the Tchenguiz brothers loans from Kaupthing made up 55 percent of the failed bank’s capital base. The report said the bank’s exposure to Robert Tchenguiz went against Kaupthing’s rules.

The brothers, however, said they lost about $1.5 billion (GBP 1 billion) when Kaupthing was closed on October 2008. The two claimed that Kaupthing’s former management duped them into placing millions of pounds of assets as collateral on their loans without disclosing to them solvency problems of the bank.

The London police and SFO said they are investing claims of market abuse, excessive loans to clients and fraud.

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HECM Wholesalers Outperform Retailers

March 8, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Retail fundings from all home-equity conversion mortgage lenders amounted to 4,049 loans in January, according to data reported by Reverse Market Insight . Business fell from 4,343 reverse mortgages in December. But based on just wholesale activity, volume climbed to 2,413 HECMs from December’s 2,207.

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BNP Paribas Said to Hire Credit Suisse’s Okazawa for Equities

March 3, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

BNP Paribas SA, Europe’s biggest bank, will hire Kyoya Okazawa, former head of Japan equities at Credit Suisse Group AG, to expand its equity business, two people with knowledge of the matter said.

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SEC files charges against former Goldman Sachs director for insider trading

March 2, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

D.C., Washington, United States (AHN) – The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed Tuesday charges against Rajat Gupta, a former director of American bank Goldman Sachs, for providing illegal insider information.

The SEC said Gupta passed illegal tips about Goldman Sachs to hedge fund billionaire Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of the Galleon Group who is scheduled to be tried next week for insider trading charges.

Gupta passed information about Goldman Sachs’s and Procter & Gamble’s earnings and Warren Buffett’s $5 billion investment in Goldman in 2008. Gupta was also a board member of Procter & Gamble, but resigned on Tuesday.

The charges against Gupta is part of the widening probe on insider trading initiated by the SEC against lawyers, consultants, accountants, corporate insiders and hedge fund managers.

The 62-year old Gupta, a senior executive at McKinsey & Company, is the most prominent business executive charged by the SEC. In the last 18 months, federal prosecutors in Manhattan have filed insider trading charges against 46 people, but most of them are junior traders, lawyers or midlevel executives.

The SEC said Rajaratnam used tips provided by Gupta to pocket more than $18 million of investment gains or avoided losses. The regulator said Gupta betrayed the highest trust given to him by leading public companies by disclosing their most sensitive and valuable secrets.

The SEC said Gupta called Rajaratnam right after Goldman Sachs directors met and approved a $5 billion infusion by Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway in September 2008. Rajaratnam then ordered Galleon funds to purchase Goldman shares and sold the stocks at a profit a day after the Berkshire investment was announced.

Gupta’s lawyer, Gary Naftalis, said the SEC charges were baseless. Naftalis said Gupta did nothing wrong and stands by his 40-year record of ethical conduct, integrity and commitment to keeping clients’ confidence.

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3 Biggest Lenders Close Over Half of U.S. Mortgages

February 15, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Home loan closings by U.S. lenders during 2010 were around $1.5 trillion. Activity was down from the prior year’s roughly $2.0 trillion. Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Chase originated 56 percent of last year’s business.

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Morgan Stanley May Turn Proprietary Group Into Client Business

February 9, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Morgan Stanley, the world’s top merger adviser, may turn its remaining proprietary-trading group into an electronic client-trading unit, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.

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Hard Money Loan

February 6, 2011 by Comments Off

A hard money loan is a very singular type of mortgage in which the loan is secured by a valuable asset such as real estate. This type of loan is most often used for the purchase of business real estate, but in some cases it can be used for private funding. The money itself usually comes from private sources, most often from the area in which the property in question is located.

A hard money loan can be collateralized against the property that the borrower is purchasing. If the structure of the loan is set up this way, the cash value of the loan is usually for about 70% of the quick sale value of the property itself. Because the loan is secured against real property, a borrower usually opts for a hard money loan as a last resort in times of financial distress. Sometimes it is the only form of financing possible, since credit score isn’t a huge factor in qualifying for the loan.

Private capital investors rarely take a look at a person’s credit rating, more often paying attention to the money making capabilities of the venture they are financing. Due to the structure of the loan as it relates to the value of the collateral, it is rarely the whole source of financing for any given project. Interest rates for hard loans are usually a bit higher than a standard mortgage. While the interest rate may be somewhat regulated by government agencies so it doesn’t get too high, hard money loans are not very tightly regulated. The rules of the industry are so different from the standard financing field that normal rules don’t apply. In an almost comical turn of events, the nearly complete deregulation of the industry has allowed hard loans to be incredibly speedy and efficient, now that government has been taken out of the equation.

A hard money loan, therefore is often a good source of quick capital for ailing businessmen. Unfortunately, predatory lending tactics aren’t uncommon, driving up the price of the loan. If you see yourself in the market for a this type of loan, make sure you use a professional real estate attorney, or you could become a victim yourself.

Mike Finley has been a title abstractor for over 10 years in the real estate housing industry. He now gives you his incite into home foreclosures so you can benefit from them and help take them off the market. For more information on how you can take advantage of his experience visit: http://www.forclosedhomestoday.com

Author: Mike Finley
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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