Kamis, 13 Desember 2007

Have fun dodging the drug dealers.



Obviously these guys have never seen No Country For Old Men.




Now this is an interesting legal conflict between contractor and homeowner.

Contractor, homeowner at odds over fortune found in bathroom walls

Jim Nichols
Plain Dealer Reporter

Most folks are happy to reach into the pocket of a little-used jacket and find a long-forgotten $10 bill.

Multiply that feeling by 18,200 and you will understand how Lakewood home-improvement contractor Bob Kitts felt when he pulled a giant cache of Depression-era cash from the walls of an 83-year-old Cleveland home he was renovating.

As he was ripping plaster from bathroom-wall studs, Kitts found bundles of bills totaling $182,000 wrapped in pre-World War II Plain Dealer news pages and tucked into boxes. The money is in such good condition, and some of the bills are so rare and collectible, that one currency appraiser valued the treasure at up to $500,000, Kitts said.

But there's a hitch:

The walls from which Kitts pulled the money aren't his walls. The house isn't his house. Nobody knows for certain whose money it is.

Yet Kitts claims it as his own. He and his lawyer have dusted off an obscure, centuries-old legal doctrine called "treasure trove" - a common-law finders-keepers provision - that they believe gives him top claim to the wealth.

Kitts' lawyer has drafted a lawsuit that he hopes will force Amanda Reece to turn over the money she has kept, or at least share it.

Then again, he may not be a cent richer. Several court rulings have established precedent that undermines the applicability of the treasure-trove doctrine under these circumstances, said Reece's lawyer, John Chambers.

Reece would have accommodated Kitts, but the handyman got greedy, Chambers said. Now Reece has no intention of backing down in the face of what she considers a shakedown.

"In fact, I look forward to asserting our position," Chambers said in an interview last week.

It may be up to a judge to decide, said Heidi Robertson, a professor who teaches property law at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law at Cleveland State University. And that judge may have a challenge.

"It's certainly not a slam-dunk," Robertson said.

Kitts and Reece, classmates at Bay High School back in the 1980s, celebrated together one morning in May 2006. He was in his second day of gutting her bathroom when he found a box below the medicine cabinet. Inside it was $25,200 in pristine bills.

"I almost passed out," Kitts recalled. "It was the ultimate contractor fantasy. I've ripped out walls in my house, and all I ever found was steak bones."

He called Reece. She rushed home. Flushed with excitement, they found another steel box in the wall, tied to the end of a wire nailed to a stud. In it was more than $100,000, Kitts said.

"It was insane," he remembered. "She was in shock - she was a wreck."

They found two more boxes, filled with a mix of money and religious memorabilia.

Kitts took some of the currency for an appraisal and learned that many of the $10 bills were rare 1929-series Cleveland Federal Reserve bank notes, worth about $85 each. There also were $500 bills and one $1,000 bill.

They traced the home's Depression-era ownership to a businessman named Peter Dunne, Kitts said. The money bundles had "P. Dunne" written on them, but no sign of its origin. Dunne apparently died unmarried and childless, leaving behind a mystery - a fortune thatwould be worth an inflation-adjusted $2.7 million in today's money.

But the joy, friendship and contractual bonds of the former classmates dissolved like melting snow amid the heat of all that money. Now Kitts and Reece speak to each other only through their lawyers.

Kitts accuses Reece of greedily reneging on a promise to give him a 10 percent finder's fee. Reece's lawyer says Kitts rejected that and returned with a demand - 40 percent or he would file a lawsuit.

"He's trying to extort funds from me by putting it in the public domain," said Reece.

Now she worries that thieves will take crowbars to her brick home's plaster in search of more loot. Kitts already did that to other parts of Reece's home without her permission and found nothing, Chambers said.

Ohio and most other states have no specific statute governing what happens when someone finds a once-hidden treasure, so common-law principles dating to pre-Revolutionary Great Britain come into play, said Cleveland-Marshall's Robertson.

That common law has a fairly definitive "finders-keepers" bent to it.

That's true even when the finding is done on someone else's property, as long as the finder had permission to be there, courts have established.

That doesn't mean Kitts is clearly the winner. Unless the two sides settle, a judge or jury will need to decide whether he found money that was, in a legal sense, "lost" or "mislaid," Robertson and other lawyers say.

Kitts asserts he found lost money, and court rulings in Ohio establish that treasure trove's "finders keepers" law does indeed apply to something that was lost, if there's no reason to believe any owner will reappear to claim it.

But if it was absentmindedly mislaid on private property rather than lost, the owner of the property on which the discovery was made becomes the safekeeper of the lost goods, according to case law and legal texts.

In either case, the holder must make a good-faith effort to find the original owner or heirs before cashing in.

Kitts said it would be unfair for him to take everything.

"I don't want to do that - I don't agree with the law," he said. "But you've got to start somewhere.

"For such a happy, exciting adventure," he added, "I can't believe it just went to [ruin] like this."


There is a reason why $182,000 and valuables were stashed in a wall and it is probably not a legal one. If I were the owner I would just turn it over to the authorities. If the contractor wants the money, fine. Then the contractor takes the risk if someone decides to come back for it. And I am going to make it clear publicly that I have no claims to the cash. The irony is that in the end all that money is going to probably go to legal fees anyway.

Rabu, 12 Desember 2007

Aww nuts



Pass the Malox.

The common mantra in finance is that when the real estate market is up than the stock market is down and vice versa. However it appears that mantra is being mashed into paste.

Fed Cuts Rate a Quarter Point; Stocks Dive


The Federal Reserve cut a key short-term interest rate today by a quarter of a percentage point, to 4.25 percent, signaling its concern that the credit crisis might be gradually damaging the broader economy beyond housing.

Policy makers also cut the discount rate to 4.75 percent, from 5 percent, essentially encouraging bankers to turn to borrow from the Fed to keep up their lending to consumers and businesses.

Investors reacted by sending stocks plunging and by bidding up Treasury bond prices. The Dow Industrials fell more than 200 points in a matter of minutes and kept sinking through the afternoon, closing off more than 294 points, or 2.1 percent, for the day, according to preliminary figures. Broader indexes like the Standard & Poor's 500 and the Nasdaq Composite fared even worse.

In an unusual statement after the meeting, the Fed’s policymakers declined to say whether they were more concerned about inflation or the outlook for economic growth. Their statement said that “Recent developments, including the deterioration of financial market conditions, have increased the uncertainty” about what will happen next.


It doesn't seem like anyone can do anything right. In fact it seems like any attempt to correct the situation just makes it worse. For instance, Bush's mortgage aid program has not been welcomed with open arms. Even Warren Buffet is a little concerned.


Billionaire investor Warren Buffett said the United States could slip into a recession if the jobless rate increases, he told CNBC television on Tuesday.

In a series of interviews throughout the day, Buffett, who built Berkshire Hathaway into a $205 billion conglomerate, gave a sobering view of the economy's prospects, including the assessment that holiday retail sales were not looking good despite a post-Thanksgiving holiday burst.

Consumer spending is seen as a key buffer preventing a weaker U.S. economy from sliding into recession as the housing market continues its free-fall and the banking sector remains challenged by a credit crisis.

"If unemployment picks up then we could be in for a recession," Buffett said.


Yesterday morning I heard this guy on Bloomberg Radio


Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- DuPont Co. Chief Executive Officer Charles Holliday said the U.S. economy will avoid a recession in 2008, buoyed by services and commercial construction as well as falling oil prices.

``The odds are not likely for a recession, but pretty slow growth,'' Holliday, 59, said yesterday in an interview in New York. ``So much of the economy is now the service sector that it takes more to take us into recession than it did.''

Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch & Co. have predicted the U.S. economy, the world's largest, will enter a recession as the worst housing slump in 16 years prompts lenders to tighten credit. Economists expecting the U.S. economy will shrink next year rose to nine last month from five in September, according to a survey by the National Association for Business Economics.

DuPont, based in Wilmington, Delaware, is the world's largest maker of car paint and supplies Corian countertops and Tyvek insulation to homebuilders. U.S. demand for automotive products will slow in the first half, Holliday said. Outside the U.S., where DuPont gets 60 percent of sales, growth remains ``solid,'' especially in Asia and Latin America, he said.

``We are in a recession in the U.S. housing industry right now,'' Holliday said. ``We think it will take longer to come back.''

Crude-oil prices may average about $85 a barrel next year, Holliday said, down from today's close of $90.02 in New York. DuPont, the third-largest U.S. chemical maker, expects the dollar to be little changed against the euro and yen, he said.


Since when are recessions selective? Either you are in one or not.

You know what I want to hear? I want someone in the financial hierarchy, someone with credibility to say, we are frakked. That this economy is undergoing a Cylon level beating. But like the Galactica and the fleet that she protects, we are going to find our way to Earth. You have to be a complete dunderhead to not know how dire of a situation we are in.

Of course no one is going to say that. Well, no one sane that is.

Senin, 10 Desember 2007

Frenching





Yesterday morning I as in a jovial mood due to the runner’s high I was experiencing from the elliptical I was on and went out food shopping.

After gathering my items I headed over the checkout area and as I was placing my items on the counter in front of the cashier, I noticed one of the cashiers slip surreptitiously slip something in the hand of my cashier which turned out to be a cherry. She put it in her mouth and after chewing on the cherry she bent over in front of me to try to hide her actions but I realized once she put her hand in front of her face that she was spitting out the cherry pit in the palm of her hand. She had no gloves on nor did she have a paper towel in her hand. It must have been too strenuous to make that effort. Then she began to process my purchase. But before her infected hands could touch my food, I snatched all the items away from her grasp and tossed them back into the carriage and went to another cashier. She was completely baffled at my actions, which just shows how ignorant this person was. I mean if you spit a cherry pit in your bare hands in front of a person and then try to touch their food, you should expect a negative reaction.

Here’s the punch line. This did not happen at a bodega or a one of the Korean fruit stands. This happened at Whole Foods. Unfortunately they are not the only offenders.

A couple of months ago I was Trader Joe’s at the checkout when the cashier was having trouble opening up a plastic bag. So right in front of me, she stuck her large tongue out and dragged her finger down her tongue and then used her saliva on her fingers to get a better grip on the bag. A year ago, a Trader Joe’s cashier coughed all over my groceries as he was bagging them.

This type of behavior I expect from a Key foods in Queens not from Whole Foods or Trader Joes. It is not just disgusting but in this age of communicable diseases and schools hosing down locker rooms due to staph infections it is just plain dangerous. There needs to be more sanitary protocols, particularly at the points of purchase for consumer good, implemented.

At A&P and Food Emporium the cashiers usually wear rubber gloves and have sponges to help them open up the plastic grocery bags. At the A&Ps they even have disinfectant wet naps for the cashiers to use. This is not brain surgery. All it takes is a little common sense.

Unfortunately for any type of health protocols to be instituted for all grocery stores, some type of public health crisis will probably have to break out where the source of the contagion is from the unsanitary practices of cashiers at supermarkets.

I used think those automated checkout machines were annoying but now I use them all the time since they are quicker and they won’t spit on your food.

No pun intended, I don’t mean to bag on cashiers. It is a tedious job that where you have to constantly be on your feet and you are at risk for carpal tunnel syndrome. It is also probably very stressful since every customer that comes to them might the one that blows up in their face because of a price check. I have done my bit playing the cashier in my past so I am aware of the pitfalls.


But for now, I think I will be shopping at the Food Emporium.

Minggu, 09 Desember 2007

The Incredible New Bern Bears



This was your classic David and Goliath story. Going into the state 4A championship Saturday night, Charlotte Independence had won 7 straight state championships. Talk about being an underdog. I think the only folks in the state that thought New Bern had a chance to win were the players and the coachs. It is common knowledge that Charlotte Independence is a football factory of sorts. They recuit players outside of their district and draw from a talent pool of over 1 million. The New Bern Bears draw from perhaps 40 thousand. Despite getting behind 14 to 0 early in the first quarter the Bears never gave up hope. History was made last night. David aka Bears, won their first state championship.

Rabu, 05 Desember 2007

Frozen mortgages and a beating.

It looks our Commander in Chief has come to save the day by freezing the rates on some mortgages.



WASHINGTON, Dec. 5 — The Bush administration reached an agreement with the mortgage industry today on a plan to freeze interest rates for up to five years for a portion of the two million homeowners who bought houses in the last few years with subprime loans.

The plan, hammered out after weeks of talks among Treasury officials, mortgage lenders and Wall Street firms, would allow distressed borrowers who are current on their payments to keep their low introductory rates and escape a jump of 30 percent or more in their monthly payments when those rates expire.

Democratic lawmakers and presidential contenders quickly criticized the plan for being too timid and promoted more ambitious proposals of their own.


You will have to forgive me for my doubts, but I am unsure if this will have any positive impact on our current situation. But I bet Wall Street will go crazy over this news tomorrow.

By now everyone has heard about this recording on Youtube where a guy got his ass kicked by a bunch of girls on the A train.

There is a saying in martial arts. Your best weapons are your two feet.

No. It is not for kicking ass left and right. It is to run away.

I am not blaming the victim here. These kids had no right to act this way and I hope they get caught and penalized for what they have done.

But unlike the incident that occurred on a bus a couple of months ago, this occurred on a train. All he had to do was move to another car or get a conductor. Whether it is a group of kids, adults or smurfs, if they are looking for a fight no amount of reason will prevent their actions. That is why Police officers are trained in the use of deadly force in case they are dealing with a perpetrator who refuses to yield to verbal commands. There is no shame in survival.

As you can see from this video, this pack of numbnuts are experiencing an adrenaline dump and are seeking to utilize it. All they are doing is ranting and raving. There is no logic in their words are actions. All they want to do is beat this guy down.

On a real estate level, this does not help at all. Who the hell wants to live in an area where you are required to be trained in Tae Kwon Do and Combat Sambo in order to take the subway?

Kids. I really don't advise following this path. There are a lot of angry f**king people out there, especially during these hard economic times. Pick the wrong person to mess with on the subway like these idiots did and you maybe getting a first class ticket to a world of hurt.

Selasa, 04 Desember 2007

Are you kidding me?



I have no idea what I am doing.



Today I got this piece of job spam from Hot Jobs. I think this either some sick joke or someone in the editorial department fell asleep at the switch.



HotFacts
Good Year for a Bonus?
A recent survey from Buck Consultants reveals that 57 percent of employers expect to offer hiring and/or retention bonuses in fiscal year 2008. Median hiring bonuses range from 5 percent of base pay (for non-exempt employees) to 20 percent for CEOs. Customer Service Reps are in Demand
With the employment outlook looking good for customer service representatives, many employers are reaching out to candidates in other occupations or to people who have left the workforce, such as homemakers and retired workers. Don't be surprised if an opportunity comes your way.




Yahoo! HotJobs Featured Employer: Countrywide Financial


Customer Service and Call Center/Collections Reps – discover rewards worth talking about with Countrywide's Loan Administration division. See how the nation's number one home loan lender* and "One of America's Most Admired Companies"** can help make a difference in your work and life, with paid training, great bonus potential, and career growth – all in a dynamic environment, complete with an on-site cafe! Full-time and part-time shifts available.

Click here to apply online at: Yahoo! HotJobs



Countrywide is committed to leveraging the talent of a diverse workforce to create great opportunities for our business and our people. EOE M/F/D/V.

* "America's #1 Home Loan Lender" As ranked for 2006 by Inside Mortgage Finance (Feb. 2, 2007) ©2007
** "One of America's Most Admired Companies" Fortune, March 2007


If Hotjobs start to send out job listings for hedgefunds then I know someone at Yahoo is smoking crack. This has to be a mistake. Why the hell would Countrywide even consider hiring people right now?

Does anyone out there know how to post an email with graphics on a blog?

Senin, 03 Desember 2007

Preparing for the siege




Christine Haughney has written an excellent article on the current state of affairs between buyer and seller. She explains that despite record sales and evidence of buyers who are being shut out trying to look for deals, buyers are displaying a siege mentality by waiting it out.
She makes a pretty strong argument for buyers to hold their ground with some really scary ass stories.

Brokers say it is the buyers in this sector of the market who are now growing concerned about the impact of the weak national housing market and the effect that Wall Street losses might have on Manhattan apartment prices. So they’re lowering their bidding or stopping their searches altogether until they have more confidence in the market.


Manhattan has been able to weather the storm, however the question on everyone's mind is not if but when the s**t hits the fan for Manhattan. The reason why these buyers are going bargain hunting is not because their douchebags but because they want to hedge their bets and not get caught with their pants down.


Jason Loeb, 37, an equity analyst for a money management firm, has received a half-dozen e-mail messages from friends who have lost jobs because of downsizing at major banks. Those “I hope I land on my feet” notes, coupled with weak performance in industries he tracks like trucking and retail, convinced him that Manhattan real estate prices eventually have to decline.


He is not going to be the only who is going to be backing off. Right now as we speak there is a growing number of people are having second thoughts on whether to buy right now.

Some buyers have reason to be cautious. Shai Shustik, president of Manhattan Residential, a brokerage with many clients in the financial industry, said that since the end of August, his buyers had cut their budgets by 10 percent because of concerns about their bonuses. One lost his job at a hedge fund hours before he was due to sign a contract for a $1 million two-bedroom co-op on the Upper East Side.
“He was literally ready to meet the attorney that afternoon to return the checks,” Mr. Shustik said. “But he never did. He got laid off that morning.”


On the bright side, this guy is very, very lucky. Can you imagine if he was laid off hours after he signed that contract? He would be trying to flip that sucker.And with Citibank planning layoffs, that buyer won't be alone looking for another job.

In my previous entry, I presented an argument that buyers who are not in a dire to buy should wait. I hope this article provides further evidence on my perspective.


By no means do I take any satisfaction in any of this, because if Wall Street gets hit hard then we all are going to get hit hard. And I am not just talking about Manhattan but the rest of the country.

Sellers, if you want to be taken seriously, well you need to sit down with your broker and put together a new game plan. If the product is not moving, then some drastic price cutting maybe needed or sellers may decide to take it off the market till the next cycle which looks like it won’t be happening for quite awhile.

Brokers, keep the faith. This is not the time for despair. This is the time to find good buyers or have a sit down with your sellers. You have to figure out another plan of attack.