Archive for January, 2011

Pie-makers aim for pizza Super Bowl action

By MICHELLE LOCKE
For The Associated Press
Published: Monday, Jan. 31, 2011 – 9:04 am
Last Modified: Monday, Jan. 31, 2011 – 9:17 am

Ready, start, dough!

Super Bowl Sunday is coming and pie-makers across the country are bracing for a pizza reaction.

Turns out this is one of the five big pizza days of the year. The other four? Halloween, the day before Thanksgiving, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, says Jeremy White, editor-in-chief of the trade magazine Pizza Today.

All of which require some serious flour power. At the Papa John’s chain, officials expect to sell a million pizzas when the Steelers meet the Packers on Feb. 6, making it their biggest day of the year.

In preparation, the 3,200-restaurant chain will be shipping over 2 million pounds of cheese through its 10 distribution centers along with 350,000 pounds of pepperoni.

Adding a logistical assist is Manhattan Associates, which makes the software Papa John’s uses to coordinate shipping. The deliveries will involve 300,000 miles of travel, or 1.3 round trips to the moon, says Tony Thompson, president of Papa John’s Food Service.

Perhaps that’s why the moon hits your eye like a big pizza pie.

Why does pizza get such a big slice of the Super Bowl snack-verse?

“Pizza is a party food. It’s a communal food. It’s meant to be shared. It’s inexpensive and everyone likes it,” says White.

On average, pizzerias will see a boost of about 35 percent when the NFC and AFC battle it out, says White. And while recent years have seen a shift toward trendier toppings like sun-dried tomatoes and avocados, on Super Bowl Sunday old-school favorites like pepperoni and sausage tend to rule the day.

At the Domino’s Pizza chain, officials expect to deliver over 9 million slices of pizza on Super Bowl Sunday.

For sit-down pizza restaurants, Super Bowl isn’t so super, since diners are likely to be glued to their seats for three hours or more, says Tony Gemignani, who owns both take-out and eat-in pizza parlors in Northern California, including the well-known Tony’s Pizza Napoletana in San Francisco’s North Beach district and the new Pizza Rocks in Sacramento.

On the other hand, to-go and delivery pizza orders are much higher than normal.

Usually, the Super Bowl rush begins in the mid-afternoon and lasts through halftime. Wings also are a big item for football viewing parties, and he’ll be running specials at some locations to keep snackers satisfied.

“Between all four stores, we’ll do over 2,000 pizzas at least,” says Gemignani. “It’s a lot of pizza. It’s a lot of flour. It’s a lot of cheese.”

At Papa John’s, preparations for Super Bowl Sunday sales began in December, with contingency supply plans in place and hourly plans laid out.

“That afternoon, they’ve really got to make sure that the normal execution is taken up three levels,” says Thompson. That includes bringing on more drivers to make sure the last link in the chain, delivery, runs smoothly.

What are tips like on Super Bowl Sunday?

“Good,” Gemignani says with a laugh, “unless their team is losing.”

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Sacramentans get a glimpse of recently unearthed 10-pound gold

By Carlos Alcalá
calcala@sacbee.com
Published: Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2011 – 12:00 am | Page 1B
Last Modified: Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2011 – 12:04 pm

What is thought to be the largest existing California gold nugget made a brief appearance Tuesday in Sacramento, to the oohs and aahs of fourth-graders and octogenarians alike.

The Washington Nugget was found last year in Nevada County by a property owner with a metal detector and a pick.

“It popped out. He flipped it over and there were the nuggets,” said Fred Holabird.

Holabird, whose company will auction the nugget on behalf of its finder, displayed the bauble at the monthly meeting of the Sacramento County Historical Society.

A security guard stood unobtrusively to the side.

“I have never seen a piece of gold that’s so big,” said Margaret Leppert, 9.

As a fourth-grader at Our Lady of the Assumption School in Carmichael, she’d been studying the Gold Rush and knew the nugget’s context.

The piece, which Historical Society officials were allowed to handle, weighs about 10 pounds and contains 98.6 troy ounces of gold.

“It’s a little big for my taste,” said Linda Printz of El Dorado Hills, assessing the nugget as jewelry.

“But it’d make a nice watch fob,” said her friend Kathy Francies of Citrus Heights.

Holabird, a mining engineer, spent part of his career working the same kind of ancient streambeds that this piece came from.

Other geologists he knows from as far as Australia were thrilled to hear of the find, he said, because nuggets this big just plain don’t exist in California.

Others were found during the Gold Rush, but weren’t preserved as nuggets.

“Unfortunately, here in the state, these have been melted,” he said.

The Washington Nugget was embedded in rock that somehow was overlooked during early mining.

“It was a one-in-a-billion thing,” Holabird said. “It’s like hitting the lottery.”

The nugget – which technically refers to a piece eroded from its original formation – is not pure gold. It is surrounded by some of the characteristic matrix in which it was found, proving its authenticity.

Like other California gold, Holabird said, it is also alloyed with other materials, typically silver.

The owner has not been identified for fear of having his property overrun by gold seekers.

This nugget, which Holabird says belongs in Sacramento, could bring as much as $400,000, though he said the value is up to the bidders.

It is headed to a San Jose coin show this weekend, then to Long Beach.

The Washington Nugget is slated to be sold March 15 as part of the Golden West Auction in Sacramento at the Red Lion Hotel on Arden Way.

KCRA: Golden nugget to be auctioned off soon

 

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/01/26/3352092/sacramento-residents-get-a-glimpse.html#ixzz1CCPORCtN

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2011’s green homes to be cheaper, smarter, tighter

What will be the top 2011 trends in green building? A non-profit research group expects green homes will become increasingly affordable, smart, and energy-efficient — all trends that Green House agrees are likely.

Read the full story

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The Eight States Running Out of Homebuyers

by Douglas A. McIntyre, Michael B. Sauter and Charles B. Stockdale
Tuesday, January 18, 2011

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The single biggest problem in the U.S. real estate market is simple: There are very few homebuyers.

That seems obvious, but the “buyers’ strike” has caused house prices to drop, along with an epidemic of foreclosures. What’s worse, the long depression in real estate is probably not over. S&P has forecast that home prices will drop by 7% to 10% this year. The S&P Case-Shiller Index has dropped for most of the 20 largest real estate markets over the last several months. RealtyTrac recently reported that more than 1 million homes were foreclosed upon in 2010.

Many economists argue that the housing market may take four or five years to recover. Even if that’s proven to be true, the all-time highs of 2006 may never be reached again.

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The devastation in some regions will never be repaired. Parts of Oregon, Georgia and Arizona have become progressively more deserted. Since jobless rates may never recover, there is little reason to hope that the populations in these areas will ever rebound. Some homes will be torn down in these pockets of high foreclosures in the hopes that reducing supplies will boost prices. Whether that idea will work in hard-hit areas such as Flint, Mich., and Yuma, Ariz., remains to be seen.

24/7 Wall St. looked at a number of the standard measures to find the housing markets facing the biggest problems attracting buyers. After a detailed examination, six metrics were chosen: (1) vacancy rates for 2010; (2) foreclosure rates for 2010; (3) November 2010 unemployment rates; (4) change in building permits from 2006 to 2010; (5) change in population from 2005 to 2010; and (6) price reduction by major cities for 2010. Taken together, they create a strong statistical base to describe markets which buyers have largely abandoned.

Several states nearly made it onto the list, such as Colorado and South Carolina, but did not get poor enough marks across all of our measurements. Each was among the 10 worst for declines in building permits. Colorado had one of the worst foreclosure rates, and South Carolina one of the worst vacancy rates. However, the populations in both states have rebounded enough to make a strong case that their housing markets may recover moderately over time.

The review of the data raises several public policy issues. The most important of these is whether the federal focus on reviving the housing market should be concentrated in the hardest hit regions. The counter to that point of view is that some cities, such as Flint, or states like Nevada are in such bad shape that they are beyond assistance. Unemployment rates are too high in these areas, and perhaps the number of homes on the market is too large.

One thing is certain. The housing recovery will be wildly uneven. A city like New York, which has a dense population and large numbers of middle class and upper class buyers who will wait until they believe prices hit bottom, will have a rapid recovery soon. Building permits granted in New York City over the last four years have been very low. The supply of apartments is also low. Those forces taken together with an even modest economic recovery will help push real estate prices higher in New York and regions with similar characteristics.

The real estate crisis has gone on for four years. In the states 24/7 Wall St. has chosen here, the crisis will go on much longer.

1. Michigan

Vacancy Rate: 15.98% (9th Worst)
Unemployment: 12.4% (Tied for 2nd Worst)
Population Change 2005-2010: -2.05% (Worst)

Michigan is one of only two states whose population has decreased in the last five years. The state has lost more than 2% of its population since 2005. Most of this population loss was undoubtedly due to the depression in the car industry that led to the bankruptcies of GM and Chrysler. Flint, once one of the largest car manufacturing cities in America, has lost more than 10% of its population in the past 10 years. The state has the second-worst unemployment rate in the country at 12.4%. Michigan has a home vacancy rate of 15.98%, the ninth-worst in the U.S. There are large neighborhoods in Detroit that are vacant.

2. Nevada

2010 Foreclosures: 9.42% (Worst)
Unemployment: 14.3% (Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -84.39% (Worst)

In 2010, an incredible 9.42% of all housing units in Nevada were foreclosed upon. This is by far the highest foreclosure rate in the U.S., and is nearly twice that of the next-worst state. Nevada also has the highest unemployment rate in the United States, at 14.3%.The recession undermined profits in the gaming industry. Between 2006 and 2010, the state had an 84.3% decrease in building permit requests, the largest drop in the country. This has resulted in the loss of tens of thousands of construction jobs.

3. Arizona

Vacancy Rate: 17.3% (5th Worst)
2010 Foreclosures: 5.73% (2nd Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -81.36% (4th Worst)

Arizona is among a handful of states most deeply wounded by the real estate collapse. Some 5.73% of properties in the state have been foreclosed upon, the second highest rate in the country, and 17.3% of homes are vacant, the fifth greatest rate in the country. Also, Mesa, Phoenix and Tucson, the state’s three largest cities, are all among the top five American cities with the greatest percentage of price reductions for homes in 2010, along with Minneapolis and Baltimore. As of December 2010, these cities had 43%, 42% and 38% of their listings with price reductions, respectively.

4. California

2010 Foreclosures: 4.08% (4th Worst)
Unemployment: 12.4% (Tied for 2nd Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -74.7% (6th Worst)

California’s impact on the housing market is huge. The state is the largest among the 50 in total GDP and housing units. California’s unemployment rate of 12.4% is now tied for second place with Michigan, once the jobless capital of the nation. In 2010, the state had one of the highest foreclosure rates in the country, at just over 4%. New construction has dropped off dramatically as well, with a 74 % decrease in new building permits between 2006 and 2010.

5. Illinois

2010 Foreclosures: 2.87% (9th Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -81.32% (5th Worst)
Population Change 2005-2010: 1.23% (8th Worst)

Although Illinois has a relatively low residential vacancy rate, finding people to buy homes can be difficult. The state’s population only grew 1.23% between 2005 and 2010. This is the eighth worst growth rate in the country. Furthermore, the number of building permits issued since 2006 decreased 81.32%, the fifth greatest drop in the nation. The collapse of the state’s industrial base has been so great that its economy will not recover anytime soon.

6. Georgia

2010 Foreclosures: 3.25% (6th Worst)
Unemployment: 10% (9th Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -82.29% (2nd Worst)

The number of building permits issued in 2006 in Georgia was 92,541. In 2010 that number dropped to 16,391. This is the second greatest decrease in the nation during that time. The state’s unemployment rate, at 10%, is above the national average of 9.4%. Also in 2010, there were 130,966 foreclosures in Georgia, 3.25% of the state’s properties. This is an increase of 53.62% since 2008.

7. Oregon

Unemployment: 10.6% (Tied for 5th Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -74.08% (7th Worst)
Number of Listings With Price Reductions (Portland): 35% (Tied for 8th Worst Among 50 Largest U.S. Cities)

Oregon’s real estate market has suffered the double blow of a sharp drop in both building permits and price reductions on existing homes. Unemployment is 10.6%, the fifth worst rate in the country. The number of new building permits decreased by 74% from 2006 to 2010. In December 2010, 35% of listings in Portland, the state’s largest city, had price reductions.

8. Florida

Vacancy Rate: 21.03% (2nd Worst)
2010 Foreclosures: 5.51% (3rd Worst)
Decrease in Building Permits 2006-2010: -81.37% (3rd Worst)

Unemployment in Florida is 12%, the fourth worst in the country. Approximately 1.1 million residents are out of work. Statistics show that 21.03% of the state’s housing units are vacant. Furthermore, 5.51% of homes have been foreclosed upon. Florida was among five states that had the largest real estate booms from 2000 to 2006. Residential prices in some waterfront areas like Miami and Palm Beach rose by much more than double during that period. New home and condominium construction soared. Many of those residences have never been occupied and are still part of the inventory of homes for sale.

Sources:


1) Vacancy rates for 2010 — American Community Survey (Census Bureau)
2) Foreclosure rates for 2010 — RealtyTrac
3) November 2010 unemployment rates — Bureau of Labor Statistics
4) Change in building permits from 2006 to 2010 — Census Bureau
5) Change in population from 2005 to 2010 — Census Bureau
6) Price reduction by cities for 2010 — Trulia

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Loan Modification Seminar

Loan Modification Seminar

Thursday, February 3rd at 7pm

Anatolia Clubhouse
11828 Chrysanthy Blvd.
Rancho Cordova, CA 95742

Speaker: Stan Whigham

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www.VelocityLossMitigation.com