I’d like to know how hard money lenders use the private placement offering. I understand you can raise money but I am unsure if they are hiring brokerage firms and if they are, who are they?
Posts Tagged ‘stock market’
Who can I hire to sell my private equity placement with out violating reg D laws?
Tuesday, December 1st, 2009Bankruptcy? my situation?
Monday, November 30th, 2009one of my property gone foreclosure. i have equaity line of credit on this
000.00 . 2nd have property retail store i have EQUITY on this about 000.00 . i try to make this property to start s business . but construction contractor scam me about 000 . he naver compelete work on this property . i am going to hire a lawyer. i was away from this property . he gets money by calling me on phone . yes he have done this job , renovation please send me cheak . he cash my credit and every thing . what i do now PLEASE HELP ME . local city wants 7000.00 taxs on this property . i have not
SO DISCOVER BANK HAVE send me letter for sue on me about 000.00 well
plus home depot card i owe to them 00.00 other store about 00.00
please reply me
i make only 00.00 per month but i have lot of bills . due to this contractor .
now I am in bad situation .
my heloc (home equity line of credit) supposedly has several locks that i can lock my balance at a certain?
Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009interest rate. it is with chase bank. if the fed cuts rates this wednesday should i look into locking the balance? they probably are done cutting. does anyone have a good knowledge of the mechanics of these kinds of locks on whether this would be a good idea or not?
Equity when selling your home. Where does it go?
Tuesday, September 1st, 2009I’m selling my home soon for 25,000 more than I paid for it. Where does the equity go that is built up in my mortgage through the finance company? Is it paid out to me or go to the payoff price of the house? Thanks for your help!
Is purchasing a home with substantial equity a good hedge against inflation or hyperinflation?
Friday, August 14th, 2009Even with home values down, the property is appraised at ,000 above the purchase price and is situated between the No VA / DC / Baltimore Metropolitan. I would still have to finance, but at a very good rate.
If I decide to buy and I’ll make it my primary home for 8-10 years before selling. Is this a good investment that has leverage against inflation or even hyperinflation?
I have been given 35.000 .I have credit card debt and owe16.000 on a home equity loan I want to save some to?
Sunday, August 9th, 2009I would like to invest insomething but what or in a CD or stock any ideas I know it is not that much money so I am trying to be careful
do you understand this economic plan?
Tuesday, July 7th, 2009We can’t wait to help workers and families and communities who are struggling right now who don’t know if their job or their retirement will be there tomorrow; who don’t know if next week’s paycheck will cover this month’s bills. We need to pass an economic rescue plan for the middle-class and we need to do it now. Today I’m proposing a number of steps that we should take immediately to stabilize our financial system, provide relief to families and communities, and help struggling homeowners. It’s a plan that begins with one word that’s on everyone’s mind, and it’s spelled J-O-B-S.
We’ve already lost three-quarters of a million jobs this year, and some experts say that unemployment may rise to 8% by the end of next year. We can’t wait until then to start creating new jobs. That’s why I’m proposing to give our businesses a new American jobs tax credit for each new employee they hire here in the United States over the next two years.
We will also save one million jobs by creating a Jobs and Growth Fund that will provide money to states and local communities so that they can move forward with projects to rebuild and repair our roads, our bridges, and our schools. A lot of these projects and these jobs are at risk right now because of budget shortfalls, but this fund will make sure they continue.
…At a time when the ups and downs of the stock market have rarely been so unpredictable and dramatic, we also need to give families and retirees more flexibility and security when it comes to their retirement savings. …Since so many Americans will be struggling to pay the bills over the next year, I propose that we allow every family to withdraw up to 15% from their IRA or 401(k) up to a maximum of ,000 without any fine or penalty throughout 2009. This will help families get through this crisis without being forced to make painful choices like selling their homes or not sending their kids to college.
…For those Americans in danger of losing their homes, today I’m also proposing a three-month moratorium on foreclosures. If you are a bank or lender that is getting money from the rescue plan that passed Congress, and your customers are making a good-faith effort to make their mortgage payments and re-negotiate their mortgages, you will not be able to foreclose on their home for three months. We need to give people the breathing room they need to get back on their feet.
…It also means promoting a new ethic of responsibility. Part of the reason this crisis occurred is that everyone was living beyond their means from Wall Street to Washington to even some on Main Street. CEOs got greedy. Politicians spent money they didn’t have. Lenders tricked people into buying home they couldn’t afford and some folks knew they couldn’t afford them and bought them anyway.
We’ve lived through an era of easy money, in which we were allowed and even encouraged to spend without limits; to borrow instead of save.
Now, I know that in an age of declining wages and skyrocketing costs, for many folks this was not a choice but a necessity. People have been forced to turn to credit cards and home equity loans to keep up, just like our government has borrowed from China and other creditors to help pay its bills.
But we now know how dangerous that can be. Once we get past the present emergency, which requires immediate new investments, we have to break that cycle of debt. Our long-term future requires that we do what’s necessary to scale down our deficits, grow wages and encourage personal savings again.
It’s a serious challenge. But we can do it if we act now, and if we act as one nation. We can bring a new era of responsibility and accountability to Wall Street and to Washington. We can put in place common-sense regulations to prevent a crisis like this from ever happening again. We can make investments in the technology and innovation that will restore prosperity and lead to new jobs and a new economy for the 21st century. We can restore a sense of fairness and balance that will give ever American a fair shot at the American dream. And above all, we can restore confidence confidence in America, confidence in our economy, and confidence in ourselves.
Read Barack’s full remarks, as prepared for delivery…
Obama’s plan includes four new major ideas about job creation, relief to families, relief to homeowners and responding to the financial crisis:
Job Creation: A New American Jobs Tax Credit. Obama is calling for a temporary tax credit for firms that create new jobs in the United States over the next two years.
Relief to Families: Penalty-Free Withdrawals from IRAs and 401(k)s in 2008 and 2009. Obama is calling for new legislation to allow families to withdraw 15% of their retirement savings up to a maximum of ,000 without facing a tax-penalty this year (including retroactively) and next year.
Relief
ARE U A BULL OR A BEAR?
Saturday, July 4th, 2009WHAT TIME FRAME OF THE YEAR DO YOU THINK WE WILL BE IN A BULL MARKET? I THINK THE DOW WON’T BE ABOVE 9,500 TILL MID 2010, TILL THEN IT WILL STAY VOLATILE FOR MANY REASONS THAT ARE LISTED BELOW……………..
October: This is one of the peculiarly dangerous months to speculate in stocks. The others are July, January, September, April, November, May, March, June, December, August and February. ~Mark Twain
While there is much to celebrate this year, we find little cause for joy when looking at the financial markets. While many pundits have predicted that the final closing low in the bear market was reached on November 20th, we at Hurricane Capital Global Alpha Fund still believe there will be more red than green in the stock market in 2009.
However, during every major bear market since World War II, the time to buy stocks was after a 30-50% decline in the S&P 500. So one may ask why we would recommend something different this time around. In the spirit of Christmas, we present twelve reasons why there is more downside to the stock market in 2009.
1. Valuation: Historically the price to earnings ratio (P/E) and price to book ratio (P/B) of a stock or index is considered cheap when trading at less than ten to one and one to one respectively. Stocks in the US bottomed with at a P/E of 7 in July 1982. During the Great Depression, Benjamin Graham wrote about how many of the greatest US companies would be worth more if liquidated for the cash on their balance sheets than kept. These stocks were trading below their net current assets.
According to Bloomberg, the Russell 3000, which incorporates 98% of the market cap of us stocks, has a trailing P/E of 24.64 and a P/B of 1.68. Despite the massive drop that occurred in 2008, it would be tough to characterize the market as cheap from a historical perspective.
2. Housing Prices Crashing: The latest monthly reading of the Case-Shiller home price index from October 2008 showed a drop of 18.04% year over year, the largest drop on record. Amazingly, the drop in home prices is still accelerating two years into the decline. We are not going to find a bottom in the market until the pace of decline slows significantly. The massive tailwind the US consumer had been receiving from equity extractions has officially ended.
3. Debt Destruction: American consumers doubled household debt this decade while incomes stagnated. Consumers adding a trillion dollars in debt ever year on average for the first 7 years of the decade. Two trillion in consumer credit lines may be pulled in 2009, and home equity extractions are done for the foreseeable future. Another way to look at this is consumers would have a trillion dollar pullback in spending from 2007 levels if debt stops expanding. Debt destruction, which we believe is going to occur, means purchases would have to decline by over a trillion dollars. This would mark the first significant destruction of debt in the US since the 1930s. Growth of household debt to GDP did not start increasing again, until after World War II, over a decade later.
4. More Writedowns: We have another trillion or so of losses to take in the commercial real estate, jumbo mortgage, prime mortgage, leveraged loans, asset backed, corporate bond and credit default swap markets. This is assuming subprime and Alt-A are now priced correctly. On second thought, considering the debt destruction process, it could be more like 1.5 trillion.
5. US Corporate Earnings Collapse: Corporate earnings estimates are way too high. The consumer is dead due to the debt destruction, and there is another trillion (give or take) in losses yet to be realized across the financial sector. Almost all earnings growth in the first half of 2008 came from oil, basic materials and technology. Pricing has collapsed in all three areas. We have not yet seen the price collapse reflected in the EPS of companies in these industries. We will see it in 2009. Be wary of people touting cheap stocks based on future earnings. Trailing twelve month earnings on the S&P are .91 a share. The average analyst estimate on Bloomberg for the S&P 500 is currently .69 per share for 2009. There is absolutely no way companies will earn more in 2009 than in 2008. None.
6. Corporate Credit: Credit spreads are at levels where companies cannot fund themselves and survive. This is if companies can roll their debt at all. Much of the lending during the last 5 years was never meant to be paid back. Spreads on CCC bonds hit 40% in December. There are loan sharks who charge better rates than this. The debt markets are still closed for virtually everything high yield.
7. 12.5% Underemployment: And rising fast.
8. No Savings: The savings rate was under 2% from 2005-2007. Interest rates were low, and lots of spare money was funneled into the stock market. It always goes up if you buy and hold. Right? This was conventional thinking anyway. Many people now need this money to live on. This means
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