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We’ve all heard the bad news about the recent spate of auto recalls. But, thankfully, not every make of vehicle has problems with ” uncontrolled acceleration .” J.D. Power and Associates annual report on vehicle reliability was released today — and the results may surprise Toyota owners worried over the recent recall news. The Japanese automaker ranks at number four on J.D. Power’s list, which is based on a survey of 46,000 original owners of new vehicles. J.D. Power and Associates explanation of its methodology. “The study, which measures problems experienced by original owners of three-year-old (2006 model year) vehicles, has been redesigned to include 202 different problem symptoms across all areas of the vehicle. Overall dependability is determined by the level of problems experienced per 100 vehicles…with a lower score reflecting higher quality. The study is used extensively by vehicle manufacturers worldwide to help design and build better vehicles.” Which auto brand claimed the top spot? Check out photos and vote for your favorite below.

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The Most Reliable Cars 2010: JD Power (PHOTOS)

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GDP Shows U.S. Economy Expanded Strongly in the Fourth Quarter, Yet More Recent Data Suggest the Recovery Will Stall

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GDP Shows U.S. Economy Expanded Strongly in the Fourth Quarter, Yet More Recent Data Suggest the Recovery Will Stall

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Dan Dorfman: Fabulous Bounce May Be a Sucker’s Trap

February 7, 2010

Thank goodness for TV’s bevy of financial experts. Following last Thursday’s and Friday’s tumultuous trading sessions in the stock market, we now know, based on their most recent comments and cogent analyses, that stock prices are headed higher, unless, of course, they happen to be headed lower. On Thursday, the market got smashed, with the Dow tumbling 267 points as worries of sovereign debt defaults in Europe swelled. The following day, in response to the news of modest improvement on the jobs front — notably a decline in January’s unemployment rate to 9.7% from December’s 10% — the Dow kicked off the session on a slightly higher note. Alas, that rise was short-lived as the market got a visit from Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, what with renewed jitters over those sovereign debt problems sending stock prices on a wild roller-coaster ride, resulting in the Dow switching from its morning plus to minus 167 in the late afternoon. Shortly thereafter, though, the recent Samson-like dollar weakened, which enabled the Dow — in a fabulous rebound — to erase its entire triple-digit loss and actually wrap up the day with a 10-point gain. This latest outbreak of extreme volatility comes on the heels of a wicked loss about two weeks ago of 352 Dow points over three straight losing sessions. In a chat over the weekend, online investment adviser Mark Leibovitz served up what I thought was the most incisive quote in conveying a course of action in wake of the sharp and sudden up and down movements in stock prices, “This market is not for investors,” he said, “Most market observers have tended to minimize the recent sell-offs, dubbing them as little more than minor corrections in an ongoing bull market. More than a few disagree, describing the declines as golden buying opportunities.” Some, though, view those “golden buying opportunities” as nothing more than fool’s gold or a sucker’s trap. One of them is Leibovitz, the head of VRTrader.Com. of Sedona, Ariz., who has been cited by Timer Digest Magazine as one of the best market timers around. His indicators, he notes, are still flashing a sell signal, indicating the short-term trend is down. “The Friday rally could have been a phony rally,” says Leibovitz, who believes the Dow could shed another 1,000 points between now and mid-March, knocking the indicator down to about the 9,100 level from its current 10,012. Of particular concern, he says, is the negative nature of the trading volume (in other words, more market action on down volume than on up volume). Among his major worries, the rallying dollar (meaning companies with large overseas operations will earn less money abroad), President Obama’s anti-Wall Street sentiment, growing friction with China, which he notes is an ally to our enemies, and huge money printing, which Leibovitz views as a band-aid, not a solution. “We’re spending money like a drunken sailor, bailing out all the bad guys,” he says. “It makes no sense.” His concluding remark: “This is a dangerous market… and you have to watch out because just maybe we’re headed to new lows.” Long time bull and stock market guru Elaine Garzarelli, who had originally projected a 15% to 20% gain in stock prices this year, has recently shifted gears, recommending a hedged portfolio because of her expectation of a normal 4% to 7% correction. She now thinks a steeper decline is more likely, noting that Greece’s debt problems have spread to other countries, such as Spain, Portugal and Italy. Further, Garzarelli, who does out investment advice to institutional clients through Garzarelli Capital, sees excess capacity around the globe and a possible deflationary environment developing. As of now, commodity prices are down about 8.5% from their recent highs, while unit labor costs are off 4.4%. Indicative of her concern, she is now urging clients to consider a trio of inverse exchange-traded funds on any rallies. The three ETFs, which perform opposite the S&P 500, are ProShares Short S&P 500 (symbol SH), ProShares UltraShort S&P 500 (SDS) and UltraPro Short S&P 500 ProShares (SPXU). Another institutional adviser, Bill Rhodes, a former Merrill Lynch strategist and now head of Boston-based Rhodes Analytics, also sounds some cautionary notes, in particular shrinking available liquidity around the world. “Once central bank and finance ministry liquidity is withdrawn,” Rhodes observes, “we expect the markets to have difficulties, and we seem to have reached this position.” He also offers an intriguing observation. Cash in money-market mutual funds (a habitual hiding place for worried investors) is at a level that represents 26% of U.S. market capitalization, which is half its peak level of 52% in early March of 2009 and the bottom of the most recent bear market. He hastens to point oyt that 26% was also the peak level of the 2002-2003 bear market. One final thought: Before going ga-ga over the moderate decline in January’s unemployment rate, it’s worth keeping in mind that job losses continued in January (20,000), the duration of unemployment is up (the mean is 30 weeks), the average weekly working hours are down (1.2%),, weekly payroll is down (1%) and there seems little hope that many of the the roughly 15.7 million Americans out of work will ever retrieve anything close to the 8.4 million jobs lost during the recession.. In other words, the battered jobs market is hardly looking like meaningful revitalization is just around the corner. What do you think? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com

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Dan Dorfman: How Many More Kicks In The Groin?

January 25, 2010

Go figure this balmy stock market. A week ago, investors were beaming. No wonder. It looked like we were seeing a replay of last July’s running of the bulls of Pamplona as bullish sentiment in the stock market continued to rise, while fear showed additional signs of evaporation. The spreading bullish fever is easy to understand, given the market’s blistering performance — up nearly 70% since its low of last March (about 6,500 on the Dow) — a nine-month rise that has been devoid of any meaningful interruption along the way. But suddenly, an unexpected kick in the groin, as the major averages got slammed in last week’s final three trading sessions, highlighted by a wicked 552-point drop in the Dow. Money manager Arnold Silver of Los Angeles-based A. Silver Associates considers the drop ominous. He views it as a case of reality catching up with wishful thinking, a recognition of growing turmoil in Washington, a President in hot water, and he sees lower equity prices ahead, maybe another 5% to 7% decline. “It seems to be a propitious time for everybody to cut back on underperforming stocks before the losses become more substantial,” he says. The market’s sudden selloff is attributed to a number of factors, among them a couple of new worrisome developments. They are the President’s bank bashing accompanied by some proposed new bank reforms (such as prohibiting banks from forming hedge funds, private equity funds and trading securities in their own accounts) and China’s plans to cut back on bank lending, which could slow its economic growth. Adding to the market’s woes, weekly jobless claims have risen for the second straight week, a number of recent earnings reports have come in below some Wall Street expectations, retail sales seem to be turning sluggish again and housing remains a horror show. The President’s pursuit of banking reforms even worries some of the bulls. One of them, market guru Elaine Garzarelli, says “if new bank regulations are passed, we could see a large correction.” Similar concern is also voiced at the possibility that Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke might not be reappointed for a second term amid some congressional opposition. Most market observers I talk to figure he’s a shoo-in for another term, but the idea that maybe he won’t be adds to the list of concerns. Silver, for one, thinks if Bernanke is scrapped, “the Dow is easily a quick 200-250 point loser.” The key question, of course, for the nation’s more than 80 million stock investors is how many more kicks in the groin are lurking. Veteran investment adviser Martin Weiss of Weiss Research in Jupiter, Fla., for one, is convinced the kicks are far from over because the days of the rally — which he calls “a bear market rally” — are numbered. Why so? For starters, he notes, the market expects dramatic profit improvement, which is unlikely because the increases we’ve seen so far from last year’s depressed levels have hardly been inspiring. Further, he points out, the economic recovery we’ve seen so far has been bought and paid for by Washington. But those days, he believes, are history. If the President pushes for more stimulus to further beef up the economy, Congress, he says, is apt to say no because the public mood has shifted dramatically. The public, he argues, is now more concerned about the budget deficit than the economy; it now prefers restraint rather than fiscal stimulus. Weiss also contends the causes of the banking crisis have not been cured, but made worse by compounding the problems, which raises the possibility of another debt crisis. In particular, he points to the “Garden of Eden environment” Washington has created for the banks, especially for Goldman Sachs, by giving them a blank check to speculate and take more risk. Likewise, the Fed keeping interest rates at near zero percent, providing banks with cheap financing for risk-taking. Yet another criticism: allowing Morgan Stanley and Goldman to convert into commercial banks and take more risk with government guarantees. “The large bank, which is operating in a no-fail environment, is the big elephant in the room, but no one is addressing it,” Weiss says. He’s especially negative on the mega-banks, notably Bank of America and Citigroup, which, even if the government keeps them alive, he points out, can still lose money and produce stockholder losses. “It’s either fix the banks or brace for another crisis,” says Weiss. Another wary pro, Charles Biderman, CEO of West Coast liquidity tracker TrimTabs Research, offers a number of reasons why he thinks the recent selloff in stock prices is a prelude to an even bigger market decline. Chief among them: The idea we’re in a economic recovery is highly questionable because the single most important ingredient of such a recovery — signs of a rebound in wages and salaries — is conspicuously missing. Consumer borrowing is plunging. Last month, total consumer credit at commercial banks dropped18.3 billion or at a 15.1% annual rate from year-earlier levels. How, Biderman asks, can the economy grow when such borrowing is falling. The answer, he says, is that it can’t. Mortgage delinquencies show no signs of slowing, while the latest figures show 6.2 million mortgages are delinquent. Tight credit, falling wages and high gas prices are slamming the consumer. Corporations and corporate insiders, Wall Street’s so-called smart money, remain aggressive sellers of stocks. Biderman, incidentally, received a fair amount of press coverage when he charged that the market’s sharp rise was a reflection of manipulation of stock index futures by the Fed and the U.S. Treasury. At the recent running of the bulls in Pamplona, a man was gored to death. The bottom line here: regardless of what you hear from the endless number of bulls, not everything is coming up roses. So beware, you could easily get financially gored. What do you think? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com

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Program takes the stress out of distressed debt

December 31, 2009

Recently, many lawyers have found themselves taking crash courses in dealing with distressed companies and defaults. PLI’s Recent Developments in Distressed Debt, Restructurings and Workouts — Fallout From the Credit Crunch, being held Jan. 28 and ,

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Program takes the stress out of distressed debt

December 31, 2009

Recently, many lawyers have found themselves taking crash courses in dealing with distressed companies and defaults. PLI’s Recent Developments in Distressed Debt, Restructurings and Workouts — Fallout From the Credit Crunch, being held Jan. 28 and ,

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Fitch Downgrades Dillon Read CMBS CDO 2006-1 Ltd./Corp.; Removed from Watch Negative (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)

December 11, 2009

NEW YORK—-Fitch Ratings has downgraded nine classes issued by Dillon Read CMBS CDO 2006-1 Ltd./Corp. and removed eight of those classes from Rating Watch Negative as a result of significant negative credit migration of the recent vintage commercial mortgage backed securities collateral within the portfolio.

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Whither Real Estate’s Comeback (Forbes)

December 2, 2009

Panelists at the recent Zell Lurie Real Estate Center conference say there are glimmers of confidence, but only in specific areas.

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Brad Sherman: Finance Safeguards An Executive Power Grab, "TARP On Steroids"

October 28, 2009

In the wake of the recent financial meltdown, it sounds like a reasonable idea: A proposal granting the White House broad new authority to take over when a failing institution threatens to drag others — perhaps the whole economy — down with it. Yet that proposal, included as a part of wide-ranging finance reform legislation moving through the House this month, is also sparking bouts of indignation on Capitol Hill, where at least one vocal Democrat says the provision represents an executive-branch power grab that would prop up too-big-to-fail institutions at the expense of smaller banks.

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New Bluffton Real Estate Agents Announced by Foundation Realty (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)

October 25, 2009

Foundation Realty, an innovative Hilton Head Island based real estate firm announces the recent addition of two new real estate professionals that will specialize in serving the needs of clients in the growing Bluffton, SC market.

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Summers: Banks Must Agree To New Regulation

October 16, 2009

NEW YORK — A top White House official called on financial institutions to accept new rules in order to help the economic system avoid future “devastating consequences for workers, consumers and taxpayers.” “Financial institutions that have benefited from government support can, should, and must use this moment to think about what they can do for their country – by accepting the necessary regulation to protect the American people,” White House chief economic adviser Lawrence Summers said Friday at a conference sponsored by The Economist magazine. Banks and other financial institutions must accept the Obama administration’s push for the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency that would oversee mortgages, credit cards and overdraft practices. Summers said it was “a bit rich” for institutions that received billions in taxpayer money to complain that such an agency would inhibit financial innovation – such as those that developed algorithms to maximize the gains from overdraft fees on customers’ bounced checks. Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and other banks recently said they would no longer automatically enroll customers for the costly overdraft protection. The House Financial Services Committee is overseeing the creation of the consumer protection agency and is expected to approve it next week. On Friday, Summers commended the same House committee for moving to regulate derivatives a day earlier. “A return to the status quo is unacceptable,” Summers said. Banks must increase capital cushions and accept regulation and not be able to choose their own regulator, “playing one against the other,” he added. After a generation of “accidents” that had “devastating consequences for workers, consumers, and taxpayers” – including the recent financial crisis, the savings and loan problems of the 1990s and the bursting of the dot-com bubble earlier this decade – banks should accept new regulations, Summers said. “Wall Street was no small part of the cause of the crisis and Wall Street needs to be part of the solution,” he said. Regulators also must have more tools to deal with institutions that fail, and not be stuck between putting up billions in taxpayer money or allowing one interconnected firm’s collapse to bring down the entire financial system. Summers reminded his audience of dark-suited men and women that while the financial sector seems to be improving, average Americans are suffering from rising unemployment and emergency government programs are still needed. “There is a gulf as large as any I can remember in the recent return to good fortune for many in the financial sector and the fortunes of the broad American middle class,” he said. “It is crucially important to avoid premature withdrawal of expansionary measures.”

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Magnum Hunter Resources Announces Management Additions

October 2, 2009

HOUSTON, TX–(Marketwire – October 2, 2009) – Magnum Hunter Resources Corporation’s ( NYSE Amex : MHR ) (the “Company”) announced this morning several management additions in the Company’s exploration, administration, legal and finance departments. These changes address the addition of three new exploration professionals added from the recent closing of the Sharon Resources, Inc. acquisition as announced on September 30, 2009, and several internal changes to management responsibilities and associated corporate titles.

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GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Limited (HKG:3800) Clarification On Mr. Zhu Gong Shan’s Recent Share Transfer

October 2, 2009

GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Limited (HKG:3800) Clarification On Mr. Zhu Gong Shan’s Recent Share Transfer

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Rex Minerals Limited (ASX:RXM) Updates On Results From Recent Drilling And Geophysical Programs At The Mt Carrington Project

September 28, 2009

Rex Minerals Limited (ASX:RXM) Updates On Results From Recent Drilling And Geophysical Programs At The Mt Carrington Project

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The Situs Companies continue expansion with launch of loan servicing business in Germany (DE)

September 22, 2009

Global commercial real estate advisory firm The Situs Companies today announced further growth in its European business with the recent acquisition of GSSG, a leading German loan servicing company, which is now part

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Speakers Define Real Estate’s ‘New Normal’

September 19, 2009

the recent crisis took hold. made these sobering comments before more than 300 people at the inaugural RealShare Distressed Assets conference in Dallas, where he moderated the panel, ‘An Inside Look at the World of Special Servicers.’ He noted that that

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Biotech Industry Veteran K. Peter Hirth Joins Alios BioPharma Board of Directors

August 13, 2009

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA–(Marketwire – August 13, 2009) – Alios BioPharma, Inc. has appointed Plexxikon Founder and Chief Executive Officer K. Peter Hirth, Ph.D., to its Board of Directors. “With the recent close of its $32 million Series A financing, Alios BioPharma is poised to leverage the company’s complementary group of platform technologies to generate multiple distinct therapeutic products,” said K. Peter Hirth, Ph.D. “Dr. Blatt and his team are currently developing the Alios portfolio of novel therapeutic agents to treat serious viral infections such as chronic hepatitis B and C, and respiratory viruses.”

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New Starwood REIT Raises $810M; May Top Mead Johnson’s Record $828 …

August 12, 2009

Market sources tell Real Estate Channel Starwood is among at least two dozen private-equity firms planning to form publicly traded REITs to buy or originate debt used to finance offices, retail centers and other real estate . Other recent offerings include those by Apollo Management LP and Colony Capital LLC. PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust, established by former executives of Countrywide Financial Corp., has raised $335 million by selling shares, less than half of the … Read the rest here: New Starwood REIT Raises $810M; May Top Mead Johnson's Record $828 …

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Social Media Use Growing Despite RE Industry Struggles

August 12, 2009

Social media have been in the news a fair amount lately, and not necessarily for good reasons, with the hacking of Twitter last week and the recent banning of Facebook and the like by the U.S. Armed Forces.Previously considered aspects of juvenile cyberculture, social media have hit the mainstream.

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