Florida posts
FeedPosted Mar 30th 2010 12:00PM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Goldman Sachs Group (GS)

Florida's insurer for high-risk homeowner policies,
Citizens Property Insurance Corp., is issuing a bond to beef up its balance sheet. The state property insurer, which takes on the risks that private insurers in the state will not, is looking to raise around $2.5 billion.
The "pre-sale" ends on April 6, 2009 and was called "very successful" by Citizens CFO Sharon Binnun, who continued, "We met our liquidity goal for the year." A quiet
hurricane season in 2009 left Citizens, the largest property insurer in the state, with a surplus of around $14 billion.
Continue reading Florida Insurance Bodies to Issue Bonds
Posted Mar 9th 2010 2:40PM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bank of America (BAC), Amer Intl Group (AIG)

It's not an unusual problem at this time of year. We're a few months from June 1, the official start of
hurricane season, at least as far as the
insurance industry is concerned. Through April and May, the Florida legislature will rush to nail down details pertaining to Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, the state entity that provides insurance to some homeowners (usually when risk is too high for private insurers to accept), and the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, which provides some reinsurance protection to carriers writing property-catastrophe risk in Florida.
And even earlier, the editorials start to fly. There are concerns over whether homeowners will get sufficient coverage. There are questions about thinly capitalized Florida carriers. This is an annual ritual, of sorts, and 2010 is no different.
Already, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune is raising the issue of whether some local carriers are sufficiently capitalized. Ultimately, this isn't much of a problem – unless a hurricane hits.
Continue reading Annual Ritual: Speculating on Florida Insurance Market's Strength
Posted Feb 21st 2010 9:40AM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Recession, Financial Crisis
Not even two months into 2010, the number of banks closed this year has already reached 20, not far behind the full-year result of 25 in 2008 and ahead of the three in 2007. On Friday, four banks were shut down by regulators, carrying forward the momentum from 2009's 140 bank failures. In only one week, the number of bank failures this year spiked 25%.
La Jolla Bank FSB in California was taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. It had 10 branches, $3.6 billion in assets and $2.8 billion in deposits. Its deposits and assets were taken over by OneWest Bank in Pasadena in a deal that is expected to cost the insurance fund $882.3 million. OneWest and the FDIC will share the losses on failed bank loans and other assets of approximately $3.3 billion.
Continue reading Bank Failures Surge 25% in One Week
Posted Mar 3rd 2009 6:20PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Stocks to Buy

Nary a good word can be said about this market in the first week of March 2009. The U.S. economy seems set to register at least an 18-month recession, and probably a longer one. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner went to Capitol Hill Tuesday to essentially tell the U.S. Congress more money will be needed for the banking bailout, and Fed Chair Ben Bernanke did the same to brace elected officials for more, essential help for
American International Group (NYSE:
AIG). As 'The Great One,'
Jackie Gleason would chime, "
Oh, wonderful!"Translation: rough sledding, at best, for equities, and a defensive posture is the rule. Still, so long as one expects the U.S. economy to return to some semblance of normalcy -- and that's the view here -- there are bargains to be had for those investors who can tolerate moderate risk. And with the above in mind utility,
FPL Group (NYSE:
FPL) is worth a review.
Continue reading Consider FPL Group, because the Gold Coast is still there, recession and all
Posted Dec 11th 2008 12:27PM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad News, Economic Data, Politics, Financial Crisis
The state of California is nearly out of money and nearly out of options.
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger sharpened his attack Wednesday against his fellow Republicans as he declared that California's budget shortfall has grown to $14.8 billion for the current fiscal year -- several billion more than the shortfall legislators already have been unable to solve.
One option to balance the budget is to cut state services. Politicians rarely like that. It looks bad to the voters. The Legislature could raise taxes on homes and businesses. That looks bad to the taxpayers, too. With falling home prices, failing businesses, and rising unemployment, getting more money into the state treasury may also be impractical.
That brings the conversation around to what happens on the day California can't pay its bills -- any of them. State workers don't get checks. Neither do contractors. Business failures and unemployment gets worse. The house begins to collapse in on itself.
It is too early to make a definitive statement about the eventual solution, but the only ready source of the magnitude of capital needed is the federal government. That would be the same federal government that is printing money to save banks, car companies, and mortgages. How many states will get into real trouble in the next couple of months? Add Michigan and Florida to the list. Unemployment is rising and property prices are plunging. The situation could give the bailout war a whole new front to fight on.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.
Posted Aug 19th 2008 10:57AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Bad News, Housing, Recession

Picture this: a U.S. neighborhood where no homes are being constructed, for miles.
In the current economic climate, the above could be a snapshot in any region of the country (or, sadly, in
every region of the country).
U.S. housing starts fell to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 965,000 in July, the
U.S. Commerce Department announced Tuesday (pdf). It was the lowest level for housing starts in 17 years.
Economists
surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected July U.S. housing starts to total 950,000.
Further, housing starts have declined 29.6% in the past 12 months. Economist Glen Langan told BloggingStocks Tuesday he knows why.
"It doesn't take a Harvard mathematician to deduce this one. Builders are competing for sales with the large supply of foreclosed homes, as well as with home owners in good standing with banks, who are trying to sell their homes," Langan said. "So the great U.S. homebuilder pullback continues."
The U.S. economy is growing at a minuscule rate or is already in recession. Job growth, save a few sectors, is non-existent. Bank mortgage qualifying requirements are at their most rigorous levels in a decade. Investors / readers ask, 'where are the buyers going to come from to spark a rebound in the housing sector?'
Continue reading The housing slump may continue well into 2010
Posted Aug 4th 2008 1:50PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Housing, Recession
During the
roaring 1990s, it was called 'merger Monday' -- due to the plethora of corporate mergers announced on the day, driven by the robust U.S. economy.
In the current sluggish (or perhaps worse) U.S. economy, it's becoming known as 'morbid Monday' -- due to the spate of unpleasant predictions publicized on the day.
Oppenheimer analyst Meredith Whitney filled the August 4 installment of the latter by predicting that housing prices will fall more than 30% and banks will remain reluctant to lend until the credit crisis wanes,
CNBC reported Monday.
To be sure, the housing sector is a jumbled, uncertain morass, so in order to provide some clarity on the sector (and to either confirm / refute several conventional wisdom points), BloggingStocks Monday corralled economists Peter Dawson and David H. Wang.
Point 1: Those states hardest hit by the housing sector, California, Florida, Nevada, will be the first to recover. Dawson: Not true. Wang: Most un-true. "You may find a $300,000 or $350,000 bargain in California or Florida, but understand that five years down the road that home may be roughly the same price in real terms, after inflation," Wang said. "Job creation in an area will determine which way house prices are going in a region in the years ahead, much more than how bad the local housing market is now."
Continue reading Dispelling a few home buying / selling myths
Posted Jul 5th 2008 12:40PM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics, Oil
One of the most controversial proposals for dropping the price of oil is to allow drilling in protected parklands and in restricted off-shore areas. Since there are deposits of crude and gas in these areas, it is also one of the more sure-fire ways of adding to production.
It now appears that the waters off Florida are among the most promising. According to the AP, "The early activity here stems from a 2006 Congressional compromise that allows drilling on 8.3 million acres more than 125 miles off the Panhandle."
The promise of the Florida coast is both good news and bad, depending which side of the debate one is on. A find of any real significance is likely to be proof of the fact that opening protected lands will yield results.
For the "green" crown, it could mean the the government will be encouraged to drill of near protected beaches. There may even be wells in Yellowstone.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.
Next Page >