MAUI NO KA OI
October 13th, 2007Of course we knew this already, but it is nice to get outside confirmation.
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Of course we knew this already, but it is nice to get outside confirmation.
William Poole, President of that institution gave a presentation today to the Industrial Asset Management Council Convention today. Here are some key excerpts:
Fannie Mae Chief Economist David Berson released his weekly commentary today. His key concern? The state of the Jumbo Mortgage market. In Hawaii, that means mortgages in excess of $625,000.
Some of our favorite economists are those at Morgan Stanley. Today they released the following tidbits:
The Superferry should find out next week if it can continue operating while an environmental impact study is completed.
Disney will build a 21 acre, 800 unit resort at Ko Olina on Oahu. There are no plans for a theme park.
We are pleased to announce the listing of Na Hale O Makena D-102. This 2200 square foot, three-bedroom luxury unit is located in Makena's quietest complex. Na Hale offers security gates, and on-site manager, a wonderful pool and spa, and concrete construction. This unit boasts granite counters, nine foot ceilings, travertine marble floors, Gaggenau appliances and designer furnishings. This unit is a remarkable value at $1.975 million. For a private showing, contact us!
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The demolition of the Renaissance has been pushed back until early 2008. A town meeting will be held in November to discuss this further. 2008 assessments have been announced as well.
Over the past few weeks the housing and financial markets have seen numerous important announcements. In no order they include solid August retail sales, limited funding for large LBO's, Alan Greenspan predicting housing prices will decline "significantly," a record set by homebuilder Hovnanian, Bank of America, Citigroup and other Wall Street firms taking major earnings hits due to dislocation in the credit markets, increased foreclosure activity, record low homebuilder confidence, of course the larger than expected Fed rate cut, declining housing starts, terrible reports on sales prices for existing homes, slowing number of home sales and ten months of for sale inventory nationally and a stronger stock market and modestly rebounding credit markets.