Archive for February, 2010

Eye of the Tiger

Friday, February 26th, 2010

I have made this point on more than one occasion ~ 2010 will likely be the worst year of this downturn.  Nearing the end of February with two months already behind us that prediction certainly seems to be on the button.  This week we have had three updates from central agencies …

The first, informing us new home sales dropped 11.2% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 309,000 units, the lowest level on records going back nearly half a century.  This drop has pushed the median home sales price to $203,500, down 5.6% from December’s price of $215,600.  This is not good news; prices need to go up in order to bring the hundreds of thousands of mortgages out there back into solvency and out of negative equity.

The second blow was job front news with jobless claims rising to 496,000, an increase of 22,000 when all indications from economists were pointing toward a drop nearer to 455,000.  Maybe the message is that optimism is not going to get us out of this, only realism will help.

The third area is closer to home for me, in Texas.  Statistics showed that home foreclosures for 2009 fell to their lowest level in three years.  As a result most of the Texans I have spoken to are jumping for joy and pretending the crisis is over for them.  Not so!!  Look closer at the stats guys.  If you go below the main headline you will find some much more worrying news.  This is where realism needs to kick in.  The ratio of Texans behind on their mortgage payments has risen to more than 10% for the first time.  The inventory of foreclosed homes statewide has increased more than 25% in recent months.  Almost 40% of the residential real estate sold in North Texas in the last quarter was foreclosed or distressed properties and about 15% of Dallas homeowners with mortgages owed more than their house was worth at the end of 2009.  So unfortunately despite the headline statement the Republic is still in trouble!!!!

All is not however doom and gloom, so I would like to wish everyone a HAPPY NEW YEAR – AGAIN … Why?  Well it is time for Chinese New Year celebrations.  This year, 2010, it’s the year of the TIGER.  (That’s the cat variety rather than the Woods variety.) 

With all of the miserable news that we’ve had this week I thought the year of the TIGER was very appropriate.  Last year the Tiger was even voted the world’s favorite animal by poll respondents in 73 countries.  Tigers are the most powerful members of the cat family.  They protect their territory with their life.  They regularly pull together with each other creating a team approach to achieve their goals.  Tigers also appear to be very intolerant of failure. 

With these attributes and characteristics, what a perfect role model for the year in front of us.  We all need to take on board some tiger tenacity, sharpen our claws, knuckle down, use our skills, common sense, understanding, compassion, integrity and toughness to work through the worst year of the worst downtown ITHOE and head for the light that we can see at the end of a precast concrete tunnel (manufactured by Hanson Pipe & Precast of course). 

If we follow the Chinese example and embrace the year of this cat, we’ll all come through this, fitter, stronger and more experienced to enjoy the fruits of the upturn that will inevitably arrive, even though we can’t pinpoint exactly when.  And it can’t come soon enough, especially in the Republic.

For the Good Times

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

So we are now mid-way into the second month of 2010 which means we are into year four of this current downturn.  Yes, that’s right ~ year four!  It started with a decline in the residential market in 2007 and everything went downhill from there.  Foreclosures, out of control credit card debt, bankruptcies, unemployment, state deficits, a failed stimulus package and well known names on the high street going to the wall. 

Against this backdrop I still hear the statements around, “Yea, but it won’t affect me,” or, “It’s going to get better this year.”  I’ve even heard on a regular basis, “Well Texas isn’t as bad as the rest of the United States.”  Well so what?!?!  It’s time to get real guys.  It is like saying, “The U.S. has broken every bone in its body but we’re OK in Texas because we only have two broken legs.”  Let me tell you, two broken legs “ain’t” good.  It is called denial.

I started this off by pointing out that we are in year four of the downturn and these fallacies are the first of our major problems.  Too many people in all walks of life didn’t want to admit how bad things were and how bad they were going to get until we were in year two or even year three.  What that has done, has only served to prolong our current problems and exacerbate the country’s economic woes.

I say again guys, “Get real, this country is in trouble and we are all in trouble.”  Everyone wants to blame the government, the banks, the lenders and the companies.  There is the next problem.

Nobody is prepared to point the finger inwards and take some of the blame themselves as individuals.  For too long we have all been driven by greed, bettering ourselves by spending money we don’t have.  Credit card debt is out of control and needs bringing back into line.  As Warren Buffett said recently, The hangover is sort of proportional to the binge.”  Never were more true words spoken. 

What a hangover we are now suffering and what a binge it was.  An upturn that lasted more than 10 years.  Bigger houses, sometimes two houses, bigger cars, fantastic vacations, the list goes on, and all with money we didn’t have.  It was the biggest upturn and the longest upturn ITHOE and even though we all stuck our heads in the sand, the bubble was eventually going to burst.  The economy has always been cyclical, we know that, but the peaks and the troughs have always been manageable.  We the older folk have known pleasure, we’ve known hardship and we all learned how to deal with it, sometimes by falling down a time or two. 

The biggest often unrecognized problem that we have in front of us is that we have fueled a binge that lasted so long that we have bred a generation of younger people that has never known anything different to spend, spend, spend.  They’ve never know how to tighten their belts, they’ve never faced hardship or frugality and the even bigger worry is that they ascend into the management decision making rungs of our businesses.  

Running a business in this environment is tough, it’s about survival and it calls for hard, fast decision making.  It’s about right-sizing the business at every level whilst keeping the fabric and integrity of the business together ready for an upturn.

This type of decision making is one of the toughest calls for managers in this sort of economy and no MBA course or Harvard institution will help in this regard.  It is experience and exposure to the cycles that provide the ability to handle this crisis and we need to recognize that during this binge we have bred that experience out of a whole generation of managers and therefore they need careful coaching and mentoring to get them through it. 

Right sizing is always a difficult task. It is ongoing and has to be a priority continuously through the length of the downturn.  It’s wearing, it’s miserable, it’s hard work and it takes guts and strength of character.  But it has to be done.  It’s about survival and it fits the old adage that says, “We have to sacrifice the few for the good of the many.”  In other words, it’s about protecting the company and the majority of its employees even though it is tough, sad and difficult to see friends and coworkers lose their jobs.  It is however the harsh reality of the current situation.  It’s a situation that we all played a part in causing.  We all participated in the binge.  We all are suffering the hangover.  I appeal to everyone who reads this to regard their selves as part of the solution, act accordingly.

Leader of the Pack

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Originally from the UK and now residing in Texas, I have always believed that when moving to another country the only way to happiness and success is to embrace the culture of that country and to try to gain knowledge about that country as time goes along.  I’ve done just that and when events pop up I’ve always tried to delve into their origins and meanings so I am not out of it alongside the local yokels.  Well Monday guys it’s Presidents Day.  This is what I found upon my fact finding mission …  

Firstly, officially there is no such thing as Presidents Day.  It is a common “unofficial” moniker for George Washington’s Birthday, the feds view.  Some states apply add-ons and link another and often different president’s name to it as well and the most popular name that crops up is Abraham Lincoln.  Generally and once again unofficially it is used as a day to honor and celebrate the lives and achievements of all of the U.S. presidents so I thought I needed to know more on that subject and some of the lesser known historical facts are really interesting. 

Only five U.S. presidents came into office sporting facial hair and the last one was in 1889, Benjamin Harrison.  (For those who don’t know me, I am a fan of a good mooey.)  We often accuse the government of the left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing but in reality there have only ever been seven left hand presidents including three of the last four.  The odd one out was George W. Bush and did you know that he married Laura only three months after he met her?

The first president to smoke a cigar (me ~ fan of a good smoke too) whilst in office was James Madison and he regularly smoked until his death in 1836 at the age of 85.  He was also the shortest president at only 5 feet 4 inches. 

How many people know what the “S” stands for in Harry S. Truman?  Well it doesn’t stand for anything.  His middle name was simply S to honor two of his grandfathers whose names both had an S in them.  (I am thinking of Richard C. “H” Manning in honor of my Harley, what do you think?)  On the subject of relations it is interesting that Franklin D. Roosevelt was related by either blood or marriage to 11 former presidents. 

Oh, and some of the presidents certainly suffered during their lifetime.  For example, Calvin Coolidge the 30th president suffered from chronic stomach pain and needed 10 to 11 hours of sleep each night as well as a regular afternoon nap.  William Taft the 27th president weighed more than 300 pounds and had to have a special, oversized bath tub installed in the White House.  Ulysses S. Grant died of throat cancer which is not surprising as for most of his life he smoked 20 cigars every day and Grover Cleveland the 22nd and 24th president underwent surgery on board a yacht in 1893 to remove his cancerous upper jaw.  Even worse was James Polk the 11th president who, sedated only with brandy, survived gall bladder surgery when he was only 17. 

On a more cheerful note, John Tyler the 10th president fathered 15 children, more than any other president, 8 by his first wife and 7 by his second.  At the other end was the 15th president James Buchanan who was the only unmarried guy ever to be elected.

Weather is always a popular subject at this time of year so what about the 9th president, William Henry Harrison who was inaugurated on a bitterly cold day and proceeded to give the longest inauguration speech ever, in the history of ever.  He died exactly one month later of pneumonia which was the shortest term of office ever, ITHOE.  In warm weather the 6th president made a habit of skinny dipping in the Potomac River before dawn whenever he could.

So Monday, it is the history of these great men who have held office in the U.S. that we should be honoring.  Their lives, their accomplishments, their leadership and their position that ensures safety and freedom for us all.  Or will we all revert to type and see it as a traditional day when the car dealerships have their biggest sales and the retails stores all announce the biggest discounts ever, not ITHOE?!?!

Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

So this week the final season of Lost started and we were all told this season everything would become clear to us regarding what the plot really means.  They seem to have kicked off this season by focusing on time travel which although seemingly unlikely to us currently, you never know what may be possible in the future. 

Regarding the plot, well either the writers are crazy, or I am.  I still have no clue as to what’s going on.  The notion of time travel intrigued me though so I thought I would address it on my own forum, in my own way. 

Today is February 4, 1955.  I’ve just come back from the supermarket having done my week’s grocery shopping.  I was amazed to find I only got a few cents change from the $10 bill I handed over.  It feels like soon I will need more than that just to eat and feed the family weekly.  My car broke down last week, and I need that to do all of the usual domestic trips but also to get me to work and back.  I’ve never had a new one so with my savings of $1,000 I treated myself to a brand new one, a standard family sedan.  Just in time … the sales guy said the new batch arriving later in the year would be priced at more than $1,000.  For that price in the future you would have to be satisfied with a used one. 

I achieved my dream with a few dollars to spare and filled up with gas on the way home.  With gas at $.25 per gallon, I knew I’d have to start cutting back on something.  Smoking is bad for you or so they’ve started to tell us.  Maybe I’ll quit, they are $.20 a pack, ridiculous.  

I mailed all the new car paperwork to the DMV, $.07 for a stamp, wow?!?!  Things are getting out of hand.  I even heard that a few of the married women in our neighborhood are now also working to make ends meet.  Before long, young couples are going to have to hire someone to watch their children so they can both work. 

It is no good complaining though.  We saved and saved and we have our brand new car so we really have a sense of achievement.  The guy next door was admiring it.  He bought a new one just a couple of months ago.  It’s a Volkswagen or something like that, from one of those countries across the pond.  I don’t agree with it.  That sort of thing could open the door to all sorts of foreign business, taking trade away from the likes of Ford and Chevy. 

The family is really pleased with the car so I am taking them on a little trip over the weekend.  We can only be away for one night; motels are $2 per night, a stretch for us at the moment, particularly if we eat out.  Eating out is a real treat for us; we do it every couple of months.  I heard there’s one of those drive-in restaurants opened up across town.  Probably OK in nice weather but I can’t really see them catching on.

I’m telling you, times are tough.  Prices are soaring.  But most importantly, we are happy.  We save for the special things in life and the feeling of satisfaction is heartwarming as we enjoy the fruits of our endeavors.  We don’t owe anyone anything, well except for our little mortgage.  If we can’t afford something we wait until we can.  By the way, before you go back to 2010, yes, I am letting my hair grow long.  If you think I’m paying $.30 for a haircut, you can forget it. 

OK, so today is really February 4, 2010.  Prices have gone up but we really didn’t care did we?  We just had everything we wanted and put it on our credit card.  Credit card debt has reached unprecedented levels.  For the past decade we’ve bought what we couldn’t afford, with money we didn’t have.  We’ve bought houses, sometimes two, not just one, we couldn’t afford, sometimes at 100% mortgages or more.  We’ve done whatever we want, whenever we want at whatever cost and we simply couldn’t afford it.  Nobody can go on spending money they don’t have forever.  Eventually the bubble bursts, and that’s just what’s happened.

We all blame the government, the banks and the lenders.  None of them are blameless.  But we as individuals have to equally share the blame.  The economic trouble we are in now is a direct result of irresponsible spending driven by greed and a voracious desire to have what we can’t afford.  The trip back to 1955 shows us how to do it while at the same time bringing real satisfaction and achievement back into our lives. 

Never was there a saying that rings more true, “If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem.”

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