Archive for August, 2009

Give us your thoughts on this recent article from the Dayton Business Journal

Friday, August 28th, 2009

From an article in the Dayton Business Journal dated August 26, 2009 quoting “Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President and CEO Dennis P. Lockhart told the Chattanooga [Tenn.] Area Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday that the economy is stabilizing, but commercial real estate weakness poses a serious potential risk to the economic recovery and to the banking system.

Lockhart said he sees a return to “positive but subdued” gross domestic product growth over the medium term weighed down by significant adjustments to the economy. Some of the adjustments include the rewiring of the financial sector and the need for households to save more to repair their balance sheets.

And the economy that emerges from the recession may not fully resemble the pre-recession economy, Lockhart added.

“In my view, it is unlikely that we will see a return of jobs lost in certain sectors, such as manufacturing. In a similar vein, the recession has been so deep in construction that a reallocation of workers is likely to happen — even if not permanent,” he said.

He said his forecast for a slow recovery implies a protracted period of high unemployment.

“If my prognosis for the broad economy is correct, the pace of job restoration and growth through the medium term will be frustratingly slow,” Lockhart said.

His complete speech follows:

The last time I was here I delivered a speech to the Rotary Club of Chattanooga in late March of 2008. Since that time, the economic situation has changed dramatically.

A year and a half ago, as you recall, the U.S. economy was clearly slowing. But it wasn’t yet apparent that we were in the midst of a deep and protracted recession. Also, a major financial crisis was not part of the outlook.

Now, evidence is mounting that the worst of the economic downturn is behind us. Today, I will talk about the economic situation and outlook at this juncture. I also want to take a deeper look into a critical economic issue for many Americans — and that is employment. The views I will express today are mine alone and do not necessarily reflect those of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).

Current state of national economy
Let me begin with the current state of the economy. Overall, the U.S. economy is improving but still fragile. Stabilization has taken hold, and the beginning stages of recovery are under way, in my view.

Consumer spending has been dampened by housing market weakness and concerns about employment.

The attitude among the business leaders I talk to is quite cautious. Investment spending this year has declined sharply, but, according to recent data, the speed of falloff appears to be slowing. Also, inventories have been liquidated aggressively in the first half of the year.

Recent improvements in the financial sector are supporting economic stabilization. Capital flows and securities issuance reflect an unwinding of the flight to safety that occurred last fall. Despite this improved flow of capital to riskier assets, I would say that financial conditions are still vulnerable, and the flow of credit remains weak.

I’m concerned that commercial real estate weakness poses a serious potential risk to the economic recovery and to the banking system. Commercial real estate loan exposure is heavily concentrated in banks and commercial mortgage-backed securities. Commercial real estate values — that is, collateral values for loans — are being revised down materially by the potent combination of increased vacancy, rent reductions, and appropriately higher capitalization rates. Further, there is a clear link between employment trends (positive and negative) and commercial real estate trends.

As regards inflation, with continuing economic weakness and financial uncertainty, firms have very little pricing power. Headline inflation has fallen in part because of lower oil prices compared with a year ago. Core measures of inflation excluding food and energy costs also have been drifting lower. Looking ahead, I expect inflation will remain contained.

Outlook
With respect to growth, my forecast envisions a return to positive but subdued gross domestic product (GDP) growth over the medium term weighed down by significant adjustments to our economy. Some of these adjustments are transitional in the sense that they impede the usual forces of recovery. Among these are the rewiring of the financial sector and the need for households to save more to repair their balance sheets.

Some of these adjustments, however, are more “structural” in nature. By this, I mean that the economy that emerges from this recession may not fully resemble the pre-recession economy. In my view, it is unlikely that we will see a return of jobs lost in certain sectors, such as manufacturing. In a similar vein, the recession has been so deep in construction that a reallocation of workers is likely to happen — even if not permanent. I’ll discuss manufacturing and construction a bit more in a moment.

My forecast for a slow recovery implies a protracted period of high unemployment. And labor market weakness is a concern I hear about often as I travel around the Southeast. Given this concern, I’d like to devote the remainder of my formal remarks to the challenge of unemployment and the potential for a jobless recovery.

Underemployment
This recession has had a severe impact on employment in various ways: jobs, furloughs, and number of hours worked. For example, the average manufacturing workweek has fallen below 40 hours for the first time since 1983. And the number of workers employed part-time for economic reasons has increased more in this recession than in any since the Bureau of Labor Statistics started tracking that information.

If one considers the people who would like a job but have stopped looking — so-called discouraged workers — and those who are working fewer hours than they want, the unemployment rate would move from the official 9.4 percent to 16 percent.

Where job losses occurred
While the unemployment pain in this recession has been broad based, certain sectors have been hit particularly hard. I’ve already mentioned the most prominent cases, construction and manufacturing. Both fields employ a disproportionate number of men. As a result, some have called this a “mancession.”

The share of the jobs lost in construction and manufacturing is out of proportion to the share of jobs represented by these male-dominated sectors. Prior to the recession, construction and manufacturing together accounted for a little more than 15 percent of employment. Their job losses during the recession, however, account for more than 40 percent of all U.S. job losses. While men typically have borne most of the job losses during a recession, this recession ranks among the worst.

Slow Recovery
Clearly, it will be some time before the number of jobs in the economy returns to pre-recession levels.

The higher share of part-time employment arguably gives employers a means to increase work hours without adding to the overall number of full-time workers. Businesses seem inclined to defer hiring and focus on productivity until a sustained pick-up in top-line demand is beyond doubt.

Firms always have incentives to improve efficiency and keep a lid on costs — including labor costs. The last two recoveries have involved unusually long periods of GDP growth accomplished through productivity gains instead of employment growth. At this point, there is scant evidence that the coming recovery will break that pattern.

The sectors in which job losses have been most pronounced are unlikely to see a rapid return to pre-recession levels of business activity, let alone pre-recession levels of employment. Construction, which represents about 6 percent of employment, has seen a recent activity uptick in the residential category from very low levels. But the inventory of unsold homes on the market is elevated. Much of this inventory will have to be absorbed before construction employment returns to any levels we might consider “normal.” Industry capacity before the recession approached 2 million housing starts on an annual basis. Starts are now hovering around 580,000.

Unfortunately, time may not return manufacturing employment to pre-recession levels. Between 1965 and 2000, manufacturing employment generally fluctuated between 16.5 and 19.5 million jobs. The number of manufacturing jobs fell to just over 14 million in the first years of this decade and has continued to drift downward. The harsh financial constraints of this recession appear to have accelerated this secular decline.

Solutions to the unemployment problem
The country’s employment problems are not completely intractable. Fortunately, most who are directly affected by job loss are eligible for the short-term income support of unemployment insurance. Benefits through that program have been extended three times since July 2008 and may be extended again.

For many workers, unemployment benefits provide much-needed income support to see them through a difficult job market. Some workers will have to look for a job in a new field. There are some powerful forces in place that can assist those workers who need to make career changes — labor market flexibility and an educational infrastructure well suited to retraining workers.

First, with respect to labor market flexibility, the easier it is for workers to change employers, the faster structural adjustment can occur. U.S. workers have become accustomed to changing jobs. The BLS estimates that the youngest baby boomers had almost nine different jobs by the time they reached the age of 42.

Along with worker flexibility, worker retraining programs can also facilitate necessary adjustments. Community colleges serve an important role in preparing “nontraditional,” often older, students for new careers and in providing targeted training on a contract basis with private companies.

In the fall of 2007, more than a third of all postsecondary students were enrolled in community colleges, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Since the early 1960s, enrollment in community colleges increased by about 750 percent — roughly four times the growth rate of enrollment in public and private four-year institutions.

The role that community colleges play in retooling the workforce can be seen by the bumps in enrollment during recessions. Also, enrollment in for-profit educational institutions has increased from only about 1.5 percent of postsecondary students in 1990 to about 7 percent more recently.

In recognition that many of the nation’s unemployed will need to retool to re-enter the labor market, approximately $24 billion of federal stimulus money was allocated for training and education, according to the Workforce Alliance.

How Chattanooga is poised for recovery
With respect to our national employment challenge, Chattanooga offers a useful example — and perhaps a preview — of how labor markets will adjust as recovery takes hold. Since 1990, Chattanooga’s employment situation has typically beaten that of the United States. But in this recession Chattanooga has been sharing the national pain. Like the nation as a whole, Chattanooga has seen a disproportionate share of job losses in construction and manufacturing.

Fortunately for this area, top employers also include health and long-term care insurance companies, health care providers and health care educators. Officials project one of the fastest-growing employment sectors through 2016 will be health care. Chattanooga should benefit from this growth coming out of the recession, and the local health care insurance industry is also poised for more demand with the aging of the U.S. population.

But Chattanooga can boast of something unusual in today’s economy: new manufacturing jobs. As you know, the new Volkswagen plant is expected to add some 2,000 manufacturing jobs to the local economy by 2011. This development runs counter to national trends, as I’ve already explained.

Policy issues
If my prognosis for the broad economy is correct, the pace of job restoration and growth through the medium term will be frustratingly slow. So, what can be done to address the prospect of high unemployment and underemployment?

Further fiscal stimulus has been mentioned, but the full effects of the first stimulus package are not yet clear, and the concern over adding to the federal deficit and the resulting national debt is warranted.

The FOMC has stated its intention to keep the policy interest rate low for an extended period. I agree that this approach is needed. This policy stance should encourage more business activity and facilitate more hiring.

No policy is certain to improve outcomes, and no policy is without risks. The challenge my colleagues and I face is navigating between the risk that early removal of monetary stimulus snuffs out the recovery and the risk that protracted monetary accommodation stokes inflation expectations that could ultimately fuel unwelcome inflationary pressures.

The Fed must deal with this tension, particularly in coming quarters, as we pursue our dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment. I believe the overriding concern should be the quality of recovery as opposed to the speed of recovery. The best answer to unemployment is restoration of a healthy, balanced, and growing economy capable of producing sustainable employment. This objective will require structural adjustment in the economy and personal adjustment for many workers.

I believe the economic outlook — including the employment picture — calls for continuing efforts to remove obstacles to the rebuilding of economic strength on solid foundations. Chief among such obstacles is the still-constricted bank and securitization credit system, especially those segments that finance small business and households.

I also believe progressive local community leaders can play a role in addressing the unemployment challenge. Beyond recruiting inbound investment that brings immediate jobs, you as local leaders can continue to pursue a human capital agenda for your region. By this, I mean initiatives to advance early childhood pre-K education for three- and four-year-olds, improvement of the public K-12 system, and backing of the community and technical college infrastructure that is so vital to worker skill development and retooling.

I do not expect quick fixes for the unemployment challenge ahead, but I am convinced the right policy objective is sustainable employment growing out of a recovery that is grounded in durable and resilient fundamentals.”
What are your thoughts on this article? The Prime Team wants to know.

What is your opininion on the real estate market and where is it going?

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

With so many thoughts and commentary on the real estate market in America, I want to know what you think. We hear reports daily on CNN, Headline News, Fox News, AJC, Money.com and so many others, but what is it really like out there? Where I work I find that there are a variety of great options out there, but there are also some really bad ones. Navigating this sea of information can often be a tricky.
Also, what about all these web sites that innundate us with information. My experience has been that about 30-40% of that data is actually current and for the average consumer to dissiminate it all is next to impossible. Shoot, I often find that figuring out which is good and which are bad can be a huge task: and I have been at this for years.
We hear so many things said about incentives and programs that are now out there, but also hear that it is often difficult to even qualify for a home these days.
Please let us know what you think and share any experiences you might have had. We all need to learn how to make this a better country and return the real estate market to the best way to gain wealth in America once again. Thanks for your commentary both negative and positive. It is all a great help!

Bru Krebs
Broker
Prime Real Estate
www.atlprime.com

Markets React to Home Price News

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Today the stock market is mostly flat in reaction to today’s real estate news. According to Smart Money in an article dated Augst 26, 2009: “New home sales for July climbed 9.6% from the previous month, with an estimated 433,000 sales. Economists expected a 4% increase and new-home sales of 395,000 for the month. ”
What does this mean for you? It means the best time to buy is now to take advantage of the best prices, interest rates and incentives before things change.
Call your Prime Real Estate Agent for details at 404-685-3774 or visit our web site at www.atlprime.com.

Consumer sentiment improves more than expected

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

According to the associated press in an article dated August 25, 2009: Consumer sentiment rose in august beating expectations. Is this an indication that consumers are becoming more confident in the spending and futures?
In that same article it is indicated that national home prices rose for the first time in three years.
While the indicators are still far below that of a healthy economy, there is promise of a brighter outlook.
Some economists expect a growth of about 2% in the next quarter. Hopes are for stronger consumer spending for the recovery to keep from fizzling.
Don’t forget the Home buyer tax credits end December 1, 2009, so call your Prime Real Estate Sales Associate for more information at 404-685-3774.

The Choice for REO Broker

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

The Prime Real Estate team is the perfect choice for REO sellers and buyers. Our CERTIFIED team is experienced in all areas of foreclosure sales.
We have years of experience in the REO/foreclosure business and work for multiple lenders. Our Prime team has specific systems and programs for selling distressed properties. Email us for a full PDF brochure of our team’s qualifications.
Members of RESNET, REOTRANS, HOMETRACKER, MULTIFORMS and more we are familiar with all aspects of selling REO properties.
Our team members are specialists in REO addenda and how they work, so both our buyers and seller benefit by seamless smooth transactions that close.
Our DOM is way shorter than the state averages of our sellers because our pricing opinions are on the mark to get our listings sold quickly.
We also specialize in Internet marketing on over 50 web sites plus all the FMLS feeder websites to get our properties noticed quickly and by the right people.
We also have investor groups that get advance notice of incoming inventory to get them sold fast.
Email bru@atlprime.com for a full PDF or Power Point Resume for the PRIME REAL ESTATE TEAM! Or call our broker Bru Krebs ((RDCPro(tm), CFS, REOTRANS Platinum Certified, Fannie Mae Certified and more) at 404-849-2623 Cell or 404-685-3774 office.
Our web site has special foreclosure search tools. Go to www.atlprime.com, then click on the 2nd link in to ’search foreclosures’. Save your search for a property organizer that let’s you know the moment a new property that meets your criteria hits the market.
Win in the foreclosure business with PRIME REAL ESTATE!

What are LoanMod Originators

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

2 “To receive a loan modification,
property owners
are required to meet specific
lender affordability
& qualifying guidelines.
The problem is that VERY
FEW people understand
what those guidelines
are. And if they do,
they don’t know how to
present and package it to
successful effect.”
A LoanMod Originator is a licensed re-seller of the LoanMod
Creator online software. Only LoanMod Originators can sell
LoanMod Creator.
LoanMod Originators are independent contractors and are paid on a per
transaction basis for sales that they procure/originate. The LoanMod
Originator may choose to sell and market “LoanMod Creator” as a standalone
product, package LoanMod Creator with additional loan modification
services or utilize it as a gateway to other professional services the
LoanMod Originator provides in their respective professions. Loan Mod
Originators may market LoanMod Creator nationwide.
*Loan Mod Originators are not required nor encouraged to do anything
beyond marketing Loan Mod Creator as a stand-alone product. Loan-
Mod originators are not required to have any experience in real estate or finance.

The Prime Real Estate team can handle your loan modefications for you. Call us today to ask about our expertise and certifications in this area.

According to Zillow.com: Atlanta Home Priced Drop Q2 2009

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

“According to the latest Zillow Real Estate Market Reports, home values in Atlanta decreased 13.9% in the second quarter of 2009, compared to the second quarter of 2008. Nationally, home values decreased 12.1% during this same period.”

The contributing factors to this event are a glut of foreclosures that have now hit the market and continue to put downward pressure on pricing. That’s why there has never been a better time to contact your CFS/RDCpro(tm) foreclosure specialist at Prime Real Estate to get in on the deals before they disappear!

Call Prime Real Estate today at 404-685-3774, or visit our web site at www.atlprime.com

From CNBC.com: Fed Extends TALF, Says Credit Markets Still ‘Impaired’

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Fed Extends TALF, Says Credit Markets Still ‘Impaired’
FEDERAL RESERVE, FED, TALF, ECONOMY, TREASURY DEPARTMENT
CNBC.com | 17 Aug 2009 | 09:38 AM ET
The Federal Reserve said Monday it will extend its Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility another six months though it said conditions were improving in some areas.

In a joint announcement with the Treasury Department, the central bank said the TALF, as the program is known, now will run until June 2010, from its original cutoff date of December 2009.

“Conditions in financial markets have improved considerably in recent months,” the Fed and Treasury said in their statement. “Nonetheless, the markets for asset-backed securities backed by consumer and business loans and for commercial mortgage-backed securities are still impaired and seem likely to remain so for some time.”

The extension will cover newly issued commercial mortgage-backed securities but will not be expanded to cover assets not already eligible.

The program targets primarily students loans and credit cards but extends to other financing as well.

The TALF started in March and figures prominently in efforts by the Fed and the Obama administration to ease credit, stabilize the financial system and help end the recession.

Under the program, investors use the funds to buy securities backed by auto and student loans, credit cards, business equipment and loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration.

The program has the potential to generate up to $1 trillion in lending for households and businesses, according to the government. Spurring such lending is vital to turning around the economy. The Fed and Treasury said they were prepared to reconsider this decision if financial or economic developments conditions indicate that such an expansion would still be warranted. However, the government believes the financial system is beginning to stabilize after being hit last fall by the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

The Fed and the Treasury also extended TALF through March 31 for newly issued asset-backed securities and already-issued, or “legacy,” commercial mortgage-backed securities.

—Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

© 2009 CNBC.com
URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/32446222/

AJC relocation would end an era for Atlanta

Friday, August 14th, 2009

August 14, 2009

Atlanta Business Chronicle – by Maria Saporta Contributing Writer
Joann VItelli
72 Marietta Street: AJC’s current home is “a critical piece of real estate,” says Central Atlanta Progress’ A.J. Robinson.
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The possible move of Atlanta’s largest daily newspaper out of downtown concerns civic leaders and one of the city’s most accomplished journalists.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has been laying the groundwork to move from its current downtown home to a location that likely will be outside the city limits. Atlanta Business Chronicle first reported the possible move Aug. 12.

“It would be a very sad day for the community, after so many generations, to physically lose such an important part of the fabric of Atlanta,” said A.J. Robinson, president of Central Atlanta Progress, a downtown business group.

Sam Williams, president of the Metro Atlanta Chamber, said major daily newspapers have played a vital role in helping create the civic, business and cultural life of cities.

“We have seen other major metro newspapers suffer so this is nothing new,” Williams said. “But it strikes to the heart of Atlanta because reporting on the public sector on a daily basis, especially investigative reporting, is crucial to good government.”

The AJC’s roots downtown date back more than a century. Throughout its history, the Atlanta Journal and the Atlanta Constitution have produced some of the city’s leading citizens, beginning with editor Henry Grady’s vision for the New South in the late 1880s to “Gone With The Wind” author Margaret Mitchell to editor Ralph McGill and columnists Celestine Sibley and Lewis Grizzard.

As a testament to his role in the city, Grady’s statue stands proudly in the middle of Marietta Street just a block away from the newspaper’s building.

If the AJC does move out of the city, “I can see Henry Grady holding a handkerchief to his eyes,” said George Goodwin, 92, who won the Atlanta Journal’s first Pulitzer Prize in 1948 for exposing voter fraud in Telfair County.

AJC executives have been letting community leaders and employees know about the possible move, telling them that decision should be announced later this month. The AJC’s new publisher, Michael Joseph, informed employees in an Aug. 3 e-mail about a possible relocation.

“We have been exploring all the options to lower our cost structure, including real estate,” said Jennifer Morrow, the AJC’s external communications manager. “We are looking at a lot of options related to real estate opportunities.”

She added that a decision likely will be announced within a couple of weeks.

The AJC’s parent, Cox Enterprises Inc., made a similar move in Dayton, Ohio, in 2007, when it moved the headquarters of the Dayton Daily News out of downtown Dayton.

That decision was met with disappointment from Dayton economic development groups, including the Downtown Dayton Partnership.

Cox’s Doug Franklin, who until recently was publisher of the AJC, was formerly publisher of Cox Ohio Publishing, where he was involved in the 2006 decision to move the Dayton Daily News outside of downtown Dayton.

Even though the problems of the newspaper industry are well-known, CAP’s Robinson wondered how moving the AJC from the city would put it in a better position to cover Atlanta, especially “when the major institutions and the leaders who create or shape the news are in the central city.”

But Robinson said that although it would be a great disappointment, the AJC moving would “not be a death knell” for downtown. “It’s not the end of the world for us,” Robinson said. “We will go on about our business of building a great downtown.”

Actually, Robinson said the AJC’s current home at 72 Marietta St. is “a critical piece of real estate.” It is a strategic site for the redevelopment of Marietta Street and the railroad gulch that is part of the proposed “green line” project and a new multimodal train station.

Retired journalist Goodwin remembered the 20 years that he worked for the Atlanta Journal right after World War II.

“I have difficulty imagining our major newspaper being anywhere else but the heart of Atlanta,” said Goodwin, who after leaving the Atlanta Journal became the dean of the city’s public relations professionals. “Atlanta is a particularly large circle. And if you are a circular city, you’ve got to be located in the middle.”

CAP’s Robinson said he knows newspapers are in transition and that the industry is struggling. “When faced with questions of survival, institutions make radical decisions,” said Robinson, who hopes the Atlanta community will try to get the AJC to reconsider its plans before a final decision is announced.

Goodwin still has a hard time believing the AJC could leave the central city. “It’s a very negative thing. Somebody in civic Atlanta needs to say … ‘You can’t do this.’ ”

Reach Saporta at (404) 736-3612 or maria@saporta.biz.

http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2009/08/17/story2.html?b=1250481600^1932931

Gallery | Efficient design with vibrant touches | ajchomefinder.com

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Gallery | Efficient design with vibrant touches | ajchomefinder.com

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