by Calculated Risk on 3/04/2009 10:00:00 AM
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
February ISM Non-Manufacturing Index Shows Faster Contraction
From the Institute for Supply Management: February 2009 Non-Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®
"The NMI (Non-Manufacturing Index) registered 41.6 percent in February, 1.3 percentage points lower than the 42.9 percent registered in January, indicating contraction in the non-manufacturing sector for the fifth consecutive month at a slightly faster rate. The Non-Manufacturing Business Activity Index decreased 4 percentage points to 40.2 percent. The New Orders Index decreased 0.9 percentage point to 40.7 percent, and the Employment Index increased 2.9 percentage points to 37.3 percent. The Prices Index increased 5.6 percentage points to 48.1 percent in February, indicating a slower decrease in prices from January. According to the NMI, one non-manufacturing industry reported growth in February. Respondents are concerned about the soft market conditions, the negative outlook for employment and the overall state of the economy."This is another weak report.
Treasury Releases Detailed Guidelines on Mortgage Modification Plan
by Calculated Risk on 3/04/2009 09:24:00 AM
From MarketWatch: Treasury says mortgage plan to help up to 9 mln homeowners
The Treasury Department released guidelines to its mortgage modification plan on Wednesday and said that the program will help up to 9 million homeowners avoid foreclosure. The guidelines will enable servicers to begin modifying mortgages right away ... The Treasury program also includes incentives for removing second liens on loans.From financialstability.gov (Treasury site):
Summary of Guidelines
Modification Program Guidelines
Counselor Q&A
Fact Sheet
Report: 8.3 Million U.S. Homeowners with Negative Equity
by Calculated Risk on 3/04/2009 09:08:00 AM
From Bloomberg: More Than 8.3 Million U.S. Mortgages Are Underwater
More than 8.3 million U.S. mortgage holders owed more on their loans in the fourth quarter than their property was worth as the recession cut home values by $2.4 trillion last year, First American CoreLogic said.Late last year Mark Zandi at Moody's Economy.com estimated that there were "roughly 12 million households, or 16%, owe more than their homes are worth". The difference between the estimates is probably because a large number of homeowners have little equity - and small changes in home price assumptions change the number underwater significantly. The differences in percentages is because CoreLogic is using only households with mortgages; Zandi used all households (about 31% of households have no mortgages).
An additional 2.2 million borrowers will be underwater if home prices decline another 5 percent, First American, a Santa Ana, California-based seller of mortgage and economic data, said in a report today. Households with negative equity or near it account for a quarter of all mortgage holders.
Toll Brothers: More Losses, No Pick-up in Activity
by Calculated Risk on 3/04/2009 06:48:00 AM
"We have not yet seen a pick-up in activity at our communities other than ordinary seasonal increases for this time of year."Press Release: Toll Brothers Reports 1st Qtr 2009 Results
Robert I. Toll, chairman and chief executive officer, March 4, 2009
Toll Brothers ... today reported a FY 2009 first quarter net loss of $88.9 million ... which included pre-tax write-downs totaling $156.6 million.Toll's normal cancellation rate is about 7%.
...
Joel H. Rassman, chief financial officer, stated: "Given the numerous uncertainties related to sales paces, sales prices, mortgage markets, cancellations, market direction and the potential for and size of future impairments, it is particularly difficult in the current climate to provide guidance for the rest of FY 2009. As a result, we will not provide earnings guidance at this time."
...
FY 2009's first-quarter cancellation rate (current-quarter cancellations divided by current-quarter signed contracts) was 37.1% ...
In summary: More losses. More write-downs. More cancellations. No guidance. No pick-up in activity.
Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Interesting Technical Pattern Developing*
by Calculated Risk on 3/03/2009 09:30:00 PM
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
Reader Nate suggests the S&P 500 is just tracing out the Mortgage Pig™. (ht Nate and IF)
* IF suggested the post title.
Mortgage Pig™ says: "In UR Poolz Killin your convexity."
For those interested, here are few sources for futures and the foreign markets.
Bloomberg Futures.
CBOT mini-sized Dow
CME Globex Flash Quotes
Futures from barchart.com
And the Asian markets.
And a graph of the Asian markets.
Best to all.


