IPII - Imperial Industries Inc. - 500 Beiträge pro Seite
eröffnet am 21.04.06 21:11:53 von
neuester Beitrag 25.09.06 16:30:26 von
neuester Beitrag 25.09.06 16:30:26 von
Beiträge: 29
ID: 1.055.342
ID: 1.055.342
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Gesamt: 975
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ISIN: US4528484011 · WKN: A0D9JY
Werte aus der Branche Baugewerbe
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
20,630 | +36,17 | |
2,8900 | +34,42 | |
26,13 | +18,24 | |
1,2100 | +15,24 | |
47,64 | +12,52 |
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
1.800,00 | -10,00 | |
2,2500 | -10,54 | |
4,5000 | -10,98 | |
1,7900 | -11,39 | |
4,1600 | -12,05 |
IPII ist ein Microcap aus den Südstaaten, die Baumaterialien produzieren und vertreiben, nicht besonders aufregend, aber haben ein sattes Wachstum und hatten letzten Sommer während der Hurricane einen Riesenlauf. Nach den Jahreszahlen neulich ( 30% Wachstum) machte die Aktie einen Riesensatz, und riss ein Gap bei knapp unter 17. Heute gab die Aktie nach der Rally zum ersten Mal nach. In der Hoffnung die Aktie noch mal unter 20 zu bekommen
(nach Quartalszahlen stürzt sie gerne mal 20 od. 30% ab) warte ich jetzt auf einen Einstiegspunkt, vor der nächsten Hurricanesaison.
IPII sitzt mit seinen Verkaufszentren genau in den Hotspots von Luisiana und Alabama, in denen die Zerstörungen besonders groß sind.
http://www.imperialindustries.com/
chart
http://stockcharts.com/gallery/?ipii
Imperial Industries, Inc., through its subsidiaries, engages in the manufacture and distribution of building materials to building materials dealers and others in the southeast United States. It produces and distributes pool finish coatings, roof tile mortar, stucco, and plaster products, as well as gypsum wallboard, roofing, and insulation products. The company’s pool finish products are used as coatings for below ground swimming pools; roof tile mortar is used to adhere cement roof tiles to the roof; stucco products are used as a finishing coat to exterior surfaces; and plaster is used to finish interiors of structures. It sells its products to contractors, subcontractors, and building materials dealers that provide building materials for the construction of residential, commercial, and industrial buildings and swimming pools. The company was founded in 1937 and is based in Pompano Beach, Florida.
microcaps sind nicht unbedingt was für jeden.
oftmals dümpelt so eine aktie mit minimalsten umsätzen dahin, und dann gibt es 3 % sprünge in 5 minuten, so wie eben.
Wenn hier nicht einige wieder dran drehen, ist das intraday reversal ziemlich beeindruckend.
oftmals dümpelt so eine aktie mit minimalsten umsätzen dahin, und dann gibt es 3 % sprünge in 5 minuten, so wie eben.
Wenn hier nicht einige wieder dran drehen, ist das intraday reversal ziemlich beeindruckend.
die firma ist ja schon seit 30 jahren börsennotiert.
immer nur so herumgetümpelt bis letztes jahr dann, aber dann gings los!
würde erst mal abwarten, ob imperial das letzte ath knackt.
dann aber rein in die aktie
die aktie hat eine eigenkapitalrentabilität von über 40% erreicht im letzten jahr. nur mal zum vergleich, der branchendurchschnitt liegt lediglich bei 9%! solche ertragsstarken aktien sind meist substanziell überbewertet. nicht aber imperial industries, welche gerade mal ein kuv von 0.9 haben. (branche 2.6)
also hier stark unterbewertet.
die aktie ist nicht schlecht, bei relativer stärke zu branche und gesamtmarkt auf alle fälle kaufenswert. für mich aber erst wie oben schon geschrieben bei überschreiten des ath von 2005.
immer nur so herumgetümpelt bis letztes jahr dann, aber dann gings los!
würde erst mal abwarten, ob imperial das letzte ath knackt.
dann aber rein in die aktie
die aktie hat eine eigenkapitalrentabilität von über 40% erreicht im letzten jahr. nur mal zum vergleich, der branchendurchschnitt liegt lediglich bei 9%! solche ertragsstarken aktien sind meist substanziell überbewertet. nicht aber imperial industries, welche gerade mal ein kuv von 0.9 haben. (branche 2.6)
also hier stark unterbewertet.
die aktie ist nicht schlecht, bei relativer stärke zu branche und gesamtmarkt auf alle fälle kaufenswert. für mich aber erst wie oben schon geschrieben bei überschreiten des ath von 2005.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 21.303.797 von DeltaComet am 24.04.06 22:30:07hallo delta,
warum erst bei einem erneuten erreichen des ath kaufen?
wenn man nicht 150% in drei tagen braucht, kann man doch früher kaufen. klar IPII ist z.t. tückisch, weil sie so leicht manipulierbar ist. heute ärgere ich mich, daß ich mich bei 12 $ nicht getraut habe.
warum erst bei einem erneuten erreichen des ath kaufen?
wenn man nicht 150% in drei tagen braucht, kann man doch früher kaufen. klar IPII ist z.t. tückisch, weil sie so leicht manipulierbar ist. heute ärgere ich mich, daß ich mich bei 12 $ nicht getraut habe.
#4
warum erst bei überschreiten des ath?
ganz einfach, weil ich nur aktien kaufe, die mind. auf jahreshoch notieren.
warum erst bei überschreiten des ath?
ganz einfach, weil ich nur aktien kaufe, die mind. auf jahreshoch notieren.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 21.334.107 von DeltaComet am 26.04.06 18:41:29hast du damit länger erfahrung? ich beobachte auch öfter ausbrüche über jahreshochs, habe aber oft den eindruck, daß ein großer teil der werte gleich wieder den rückwärtsgang einlegt. das ist aber nur subjektiv, kenne keine statistiken darüber.
weil es über ath keine wiederstände mehr gibt.
keine heinis, die irgendwo ganz oben gekauft haben ohne stopp-loss zu setzten und deren wunsch es ist, bei erreichen ihres einstiegskurses sofort wieder auszusteigen.
der hauptgrund ist aber , daß aktien, die steigen, dazu tendieren den markt weiterhin zu schlagen.
the trend is your friend heist es immer so schön.
nach der dow theorie ist angeblich die warscheinlichkeit, daß sich ein trend fortsetzt größer als die warscheinlichkeit, daß es eine trendumkehr gibt.
ipii ist aber in den leztten 1,5 jahren gefallen.
möchte aber aktien kaufen, bei denen die zukunftsaussichten noch nie so gut waren wie im moment. das sind ganz einfach nur die aktien, die auf ath stehen. nichts anderes sagt das ja aus.
an der börse wird die zukunft gehandelt.
keine heinis, die irgendwo ganz oben gekauft haben ohne stopp-loss zu setzten und deren wunsch es ist, bei erreichen ihres einstiegskurses sofort wieder auszusteigen.
der hauptgrund ist aber , daß aktien, die steigen, dazu tendieren den markt weiterhin zu schlagen.
the trend is your friend heist es immer so schön.
nach der dow theorie ist angeblich die warscheinlichkeit, daß sich ein trend fortsetzt größer als die warscheinlichkeit, daß es eine trendumkehr gibt.
ipii ist aber in den leztten 1,5 jahren gefallen.
möchte aber aktien kaufen, bei denen die zukunftsaussichten noch nie so gut waren wie im moment. das sind ganz einfach nur die aktien, die auf ath stehen. nichts anderes sagt das ja aus.
an der börse wird die zukunft gehandelt.
Imperial Announces Record 2006 First Quarter Profits and 12th Consecutive Profitable...
Fri May 12, 2006 4:01 PM ET
Imperial Announces Record 2006 First Quarter Profits and 12th Consecutive
Profitable Quarter
First Quarter Net Income Increases 30.1% Over 2005 First Quarter
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., May 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Imperial Industries,
Inc. (Nasdaq: IPII) announced today the results of operations for the first
quarter ended March 31, 2006.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050330/FLW029LOGO )
Net sales for the three months ended March 31, 2006 were $20,033,000,
compared to $16,592,000 in the same period in 2005, an increase of 20.7%. For
the first quarter ended March 31, 2006, the Company had net income of
$1,081,000, compared to $831,000, for the same period in 2005, an increase of
30.1%. Net income per diluted share for the three months ended March 31, 2006
was $.42 compared to $.33 in the same period in 2005, an increase of 27.3%.
First quarter profits were the Company's highest quarterly profits in the past
twenty-five years and the twelfth consecutive profitable quarter.
The first quarter 2006 results reflect continuing strong internal growth
principally because of the ongoing underlying strength in the housing and
commercial construction markets in the Company's trade areas in the
Southeastern United States. In addition, the increase in construction product
demand realized shortly after Hurricane Katrina struck the Southeastern United
States Gulf Coast in the third quarter of 2005 has continued, and favorably
impacted first quarter results. Reconstruction activity in the damaged areas
is expected to continue to have a positive impact on the Company's financial
results for the foreseeable future. The significant increase in net income in
the first quarter of 2006 compared to the same quarter in 2005 was primarily
attributable to the leveraging of the Company's fixed costs over the higher
sales volumes.
S. Daniel Ponce, Imperial's Chairman of the Board, stated: "We are pleased
that strong product demand has continued in the first quarter of this year and
that we were able to leverage strong sales gains into higher profits. We
remain focused in our efforts to take advantage of strong construction markets
in the Southeastern United States, as evidenced by the Company's recent
opening of new distribution facilities, and are presently acting on other
expansion opportunities in our trade areas to profitably expand and grow our
business. We believe our operations are strategically located in high growth
markets, which positions our Company to benefit from the continuing strength
in construction activity. We as well as others will continue to face
challenges to satisfy market demand for certain distributed products due to
current industry shortages of such products."
http://today.reuters.com/stocks/QuoteCompanyNewsArticle.aspx…
Fri May 12, 2006 4:01 PM ET
Imperial Announces Record 2006 First Quarter Profits and 12th Consecutive
Profitable Quarter
First Quarter Net Income Increases 30.1% Over 2005 First Quarter
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., May 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Imperial Industries,
Inc. (Nasdaq: IPII) announced today the results of operations for the first
quarter ended March 31, 2006.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050330/FLW029LOGO )
Net sales for the three months ended March 31, 2006 were $20,033,000,
compared to $16,592,000 in the same period in 2005, an increase of 20.7%. For
the first quarter ended March 31, 2006, the Company had net income of
$1,081,000, compared to $831,000, for the same period in 2005, an increase of
30.1%. Net income per diluted share for the three months ended March 31, 2006
was $.42 compared to $.33 in the same period in 2005, an increase of 27.3%.
First quarter profits were the Company's highest quarterly profits in the past
twenty-five years and the twelfth consecutive profitable quarter.
The first quarter 2006 results reflect continuing strong internal growth
principally because of the ongoing underlying strength in the housing and
commercial construction markets in the Company's trade areas in the
Southeastern United States. In addition, the increase in construction product
demand realized shortly after Hurricane Katrina struck the Southeastern United
States Gulf Coast in the third quarter of 2005 has continued, and favorably
impacted first quarter results. Reconstruction activity in the damaged areas
is expected to continue to have a positive impact on the Company's financial
results for the foreseeable future. The significant increase in net income in
the first quarter of 2006 compared to the same quarter in 2005 was primarily
attributable to the leveraging of the Company's fixed costs over the higher
sales volumes.
S. Daniel Ponce, Imperial's Chairman of the Board, stated: "We are pleased
that strong product demand has continued in the first quarter of this year and
that we were able to leverage strong sales gains into higher profits. We
remain focused in our efforts to take advantage of strong construction markets
in the Southeastern United States, as evidenced by the Company's recent
opening of new distribution facilities, and are presently acting on other
expansion opportunities in our trade areas to profitably expand and grow our
business. We believe our operations are strategically located in high growth
markets, which positions our Company to benefit from the continuing strength
in construction activity. We as well as others will continue to face
challenges to satisfy market demand for certain distributed products due to
current industry shortages of such products."
http://today.reuters.com/stocks/QuoteCompanyNewsArticle.aspx…
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 21.544.135 von Heizkessel am 12.05.06 22:06:43IPII hatte ich mal zu OTC BB Zeiten. IPII ist nach dem Nasdaq Listing von $7 auf über $30 gelaufen. Ich such mir oft speziell solche Aktien die ein Segmentwechsel vollziehen und ordentliche Bilanzen haben. Schau dir mal KSW an.
ja mach ich.
nachbörslich 28,85
das ding kommt einfach nicht mehr runter.
nachbörslich 28,85
das ding kommt einfach nicht mehr runter.
der markt geht in die grütze und IPII mit, jedenfalls fast den ganzen Tag, dann in 10 Min. werden mal schnell 3% aufgeholt.
Wenn diese kleinen Dinger so leicht zu manipulieren sind, frage ich mich, warum die Aktie nicht schon längst bei 80 $ steht.
Wenn diese kleinen Dinger so leicht zu manipulieren sind, frage ich mich, warum die Aktie nicht schon längst bei 80 $ steht.
endlich geht es mal kräftig abwärts. eine schließung des gaps in den nächsten tage ist nicht unwahrscheinlich.
der housing markt scheint auch unpopulär zu werden.
aber wehe, der erste große hurricane ist im anrollen, dann geht es hier wieder rund.
der housing markt scheint auch unpopulär zu werden.
aber wehe, der erste große hurricane ist im anrollen, dann geht es hier wieder rund.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 21.278.598 von Heizkessel am 21.04.06 21:11:53• Imperial Industries Makes the Hot Growth 100
http://yahoo.businessweek.com/hot_growth/2006/company/15.htm
nicht übel, nr. 15 der liste
http://yahoo.businessweek.com/hot_growth/2006/company/15.htm
nicht übel, nr. 15 der liste
Das Gap ist per heute geschlossen, die Aktie hat stark verloren in den letzten Tagen, und es wird Zeit für einen Rebound. Wir sind jetzt wieder dort angelangt, wo die Aktie vor den Zahlen 2005 waren, daß es einen Gewinnwachstum von 30% gibt.
Das einzige was vielleicht drüber hängt, ist Bernanke und die Tatsache, daß housing stocks megaout sind im Moment. Der erste Hurrikan kann aber alles schlagartig drehen.
Das einzige was vielleicht drüber hängt, ist Bernanke und die Tatsache, daß housing stocks megaout sind im Moment. Der erste Hurrikan kann aber alles schlagartig drehen.
nach den 2005er zahlen hat IPII jetzt ein kgv von knapp 7, ein witz für eine bude mit der artigem gewinnwachstum. falls das geschäft rund um´s haus nicht zusammenbricht, (housing bubble)und die zinsen weiter steigen, könnte sich der kurs bald wieder erholen. was man so liest, hat der wiederaufbau nach katrina noch gar nicht richtig begonnen.
und der bounce +9 %
wenn man den gewinn von q1 mal 4 nimmt und den gestrigen kurs zugrunde legt, hätten wir ein kgv von 3, da kann noch eine menge luft aus dem immomarkt entweichen, der preis ist ein witz.
wenn man den gewinn von q1 mal 4 nimmt und den gestrigen kurs zugrunde legt, hätten wir ein kgv von 3, da kann noch eine menge luft aus dem immomarkt entweichen, der preis ist ein witz.
NEW ORLEANS - The federal government will pay $4.2 billion into a program to help Louisiana residents rebuild or sell houses severely damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, officials said Tuesday.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development also announced it would provide $1 billion for hurricane-related housing needs in Mississippi, Texas, Alabama and Florida, and called on those states to apply for the additional money.
Louisiana's $4.2 billion will be added to federal allocations the state had already received to fully fund its more-than-$9 billion "Road Home" program for hurricane recovery.
"It was clear to me that Louisiana desperately needs this additional funding to implement its plans to bring its citizens back home," Deputy Secretary Roy A. Bernardi said in a joint federal and state press release. "HUD will work very closely with Gov. Blanco and the Louisiana Recovery Authority to help pave the road home for thousands of residents desperate to rebuild their own lives."
Bernardi planned to announced the grants at an afternoon briefing with Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco in New Orleans.
The "Road Home" program is intended to provide Louisiana residents up to $150,000 to rebuild or sell houses severely damaged by the storms, using grants to cover repair costs above what was covered by insurance policies and FEMA grants.
About 123,000 home owners and owners of about 80,000 apartments are eligible for the program, state officials have said. About 90,000 have already signed up, officials said.
Blanco has said that the Louisiana Recovery Authority, which oversees the program, expects eligible homeowners to begin getting checks by late summer.
"Never before in American history has any state been forced to rebuild so many homes so quickly," Blanco said. "This $4.2 billion means homeowners have real options — options to repair, rebuild or sell their homes."
Apartment shortages, combined with increasing insurance premiums for people who own buildings in areas hard-hit by Hurricane Katrina on Aug. 29 or Rita on Sept. 24, have also created hardships with rents rising 20 percent or more in many cases.
For people who sell their property and can demonstrate continued permanent residence in the state, the grants cover the difference between a home's pre-storm value and post-storm insurance settlements and FEMA grants.
Owners who take the "sell" option and have moved out of Louisiana state can only get 60 percent of their home's pre-storm value.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060711/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/katrin…
The Department of Housing and Urban Development also announced it would provide $1 billion for hurricane-related housing needs in Mississippi, Texas, Alabama and Florida, and called on those states to apply for the additional money.
Louisiana's $4.2 billion will be added to federal allocations the state had already received to fully fund its more-than-$9 billion "Road Home" program for hurricane recovery.
"It was clear to me that Louisiana desperately needs this additional funding to implement its plans to bring its citizens back home," Deputy Secretary Roy A. Bernardi said in a joint federal and state press release. "HUD will work very closely with Gov. Blanco and the Louisiana Recovery Authority to help pave the road home for thousands of residents desperate to rebuild their own lives."
Bernardi planned to announced the grants at an afternoon briefing with Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco in New Orleans.
The "Road Home" program is intended to provide Louisiana residents up to $150,000 to rebuild or sell houses severely damaged by the storms, using grants to cover repair costs above what was covered by insurance policies and FEMA grants.
About 123,000 home owners and owners of about 80,000 apartments are eligible for the program, state officials have said. About 90,000 have already signed up, officials said.
Blanco has said that the Louisiana Recovery Authority, which oversees the program, expects eligible homeowners to begin getting checks by late summer.
"Never before in American history has any state been forced to rebuild so many homes so quickly," Blanco said. "This $4.2 billion means homeowners have real options — options to repair, rebuild or sell their homes."
Apartment shortages, combined with increasing insurance premiums for people who own buildings in areas hard-hit by Hurricane Katrina on Aug. 29 or Rita on Sept. 24, have also created hardships with rents rising 20 percent or more in many cases.
For people who sell their property and can demonstrate continued permanent residence in the state, the grants cover the difference between a home's pre-storm value and post-storm insurance settlements and FEMA grants.
Owners who take the "sell" option and have moved out of Louisiana state can only get 60 percent of their home's pre-storm value.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060711/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/katrin…
Noch wird der Baum geschüttelt, aber das nächste Hoch wird kommen, spätestens beim ersten Hurrikan der Saison.
Katrina recovery: Let the rebuilding begin!
With the announcement this week that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has released $3 billion to Mississippi to help homeowners recover from Hurricane Katrina, the great engine of rebuilding begins now.
It means thousands of homeowners in Mississippi will soon be receiving up to $150,000 each to rebuild their homes.
Highlights of the funds also include:
$250 million in grants of up to $30,000 for homeowners to defray the cost of raising homes above surge levels.
$5 million to help Hancock, Harrison, Pearl River and Jackson counties pay for costs of inspecting construction.
$5 million to prevent fraud.
Until now, federal Katrina funds have mostly been used to relocate victims, provide temporary housing and clean up millions of cubic yards of debris.
To give an idea of how much new money this entails, the state's entire annual general fund only totals about $3.8 billion. It's like taking every dollar the state spends - schools, law enforcement, courts, everything - and funneling it to the Coast, with added dollar turnover for sales, jobs and sales taxes cycling back.
But with this infusion of funds, another challenge looms: How many houses is it physically possible to construct - in manpower, materials and expertise?
Some 29,000 homeowners are expected to qualify for the grants; more than 16,500 people have applied.
One scenario is that residential construction and rebuilding will gain momentum and peak from 2008-2010.
But, additionally, although about 81,000 Coast housing units were damaged or destroyed, most will not qualify for the loans, according to a study by the Rand Gulf States Policy Institute. The Coast will need to build at least 27,000 affordable housing units, Rand reports.
Coordinating construction, from zoning laws to shape growth to providing housing for workers while the rebuilding occurs, is a major task required now.
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/2006…
Katrina recovery: Let the rebuilding begin!
With the announcement this week that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has released $3 billion to Mississippi to help homeowners recover from Hurricane Katrina, the great engine of rebuilding begins now.
It means thousands of homeowners in Mississippi will soon be receiving up to $150,000 each to rebuild their homes.
Highlights of the funds also include:
$250 million in grants of up to $30,000 for homeowners to defray the cost of raising homes above surge levels.
$5 million to help Hancock, Harrison, Pearl River and Jackson counties pay for costs of inspecting construction.
$5 million to prevent fraud.
Until now, federal Katrina funds have mostly been used to relocate victims, provide temporary housing and clean up millions of cubic yards of debris.
To give an idea of how much new money this entails, the state's entire annual general fund only totals about $3.8 billion. It's like taking every dollar the state spends - schools, law enforcement, courts, everything - and funneling it to the Coast, with added dollar turnover for sales, jobs and sales taxes cycling back.
But with this infusion of funds, another challenge looms: How many houses is it physically possible to construct - in manpower, materials and expertise?
Some 29,000 homeowners are expected to qualify for the grants; more than 16,500 people have applied.
One scenario is that residential construction and rebuilding will gain momentum and peak from 2008-2010.
But, additionally, although about 81,000 Coast housing units were damaged or destroyed, most will not qualify for the loans, according to a study by the Rand Gulf States Policy Institute. The Coast will need to build at least 27,000 affordable housing units, Rand reports.
Coordinating construction, from zoning laws to shape growth to providing housing for workers while the rebuilding occurs, is a major task required now.
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/2006…
Hurricane Aid Flowing Directly to Homeowners
By LESLIE EATON
New York Times
Published July 17, 2006
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Nearly $10 billion in federal aid is finally starting to flow into the hands of people in Mississippi and Louisiana who lost their houses in last years hurricanes, the culmination of a year of political battling and bargaining between the states and Washington.
The money is widely considered the most important single factor in rebuilding the still-ruined landscapes of New Orleans and the other devastated Gulf areas of the two states. With it will come a test of what experts say is an unprecedented government effort to foster recovery from a natural disaster by giving taxpayer dollars directly to homeowners and allowing them to decide whether and where to rebuild or relocate.
Our belief is that this has never been done in this country, and certainly not on this scale, said Walter J. Leger Jr., a New Orleans lawyer who is the chairman of the housing task force for the Louisiana Recovery Authority, which developed the Road Home, as the states housing program is known. This may be the biggest redevelopment effort in history.
Outside experts agree that the level of direct assistance to individual homeowners is unprecedented. This is a dramatic shift in government policy, said Mary C. Comerio, a professor of architecture at the University of California, Berkeley, who has studied housing after disasters.
In Mississippi, the first round of up to $3 billion in checks should be in the mail within days, officials said, while Louisiana has just opened the first of 10 offices where homeowners will be walked through the process of applying for more than $6 billion in aid. Money is likely to start flowing in Louisiana late next month, officials there say.
On their faces, the two states plans look similar; each will give up to $150,000 in grants to the owners of houses that were damaged or destroyed by the storms. But the programs differ sharply in their details and in their goals.
In Mississippi, the focus is on compensating owners of damaged homes who did not have flood insurance because they were not in a flood zone. Once they have satisfied any liens or mortgage arrears, they can use the money almost entirely as they see fit. Though homeowners do not have to rebuild, state officials expect most to do so.
People have been dipping into savings, or they may need to restock their childrens college fund, said Scott Hamilton, a spokesman for the Mississippi Development Authority, which is running that states program. The state hopes to have some money available to help homeowners in the flood zone who did not buy insurance.
Louisianas leaders had a different goal in preparing their program, and were less focused on compensating homeowners than in rebuilding the state. Many Louisiana residents are still living in other states, debating whether to return, a problem Mississippi does not have. With far more damaged homes than Mississippi, but fewer that were wiped away outright, Louisiana wanted a program that would primarily induce homeowners to return to the state and begin rebuilding.
As a result, the state created a series of financial incentives to get them to do so. Those who sell and leave the state will get less money than those who stay and rebuild, though Louisiana will still give the full amount to those who return but build or buy elsewhere in the state. (Officials will not object if residents want to live in safer parts of the state.) And those who do stay can use the money for only one purpose.
We are not handing out checks, said Mike Byrne of ICF International, a company based in Fairfax, Va., that was hired by the state to manage the program, at a news conference last week. The money will be put into disbursement accounts administered by mortgage lenders, and will be doled out to homeowners only as repairs are made or as houses are rebuilt or bought, he said. The company will provide counseling to explain the complex arrangements to homeowners.
Under the Louisiana plan, the amount of money homeowners can receive will depend on the value of their houses before the storm and the amount of damage that is not covered by insurance. Loans and extra grants for raising houses off the ground and other preventive measures may also be available, subject to the $150,000 cap. Those who should have had insurance and chose not to do so will have their grants reduced by 30 percent.
An even larger chunk, 40 percent, will be taken out of the grants to people who want to sell their homes to the state and leave Louisiana. (Those who relocate within the state are not penalized.) But if a family sells its home to a private buyer, the program benefits can be transferred to the new owners if they promise to abide by its rules, including living in the house for three years from the time of the award.
In Mississippi, those who receive grants to cover their uninsured damage must agree to get flood insurance. They must also strictly adhere to local building codes, and elevate their houses to the levels set by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Both states are requiring extensive documentation of ownership and damage, and say they are making stringent efforts to prevent the kind of fraud that plagued FEMAs assistance after the hurricanes.
With so many people receiving money to rebuild at once, there has been widespread concern about the availability of legitimate contractors. Suzie Elkins, director of community development for Louisiana, said that contractors in the program would have to be licensed, and that a registry would be created where homeowners could tell others about their experiences with particular contractors. The state is also hoping to attract major construction companies and housing manufacturers, perhaps by offering them housing for employees, and training money will also be available.
Officials say it is far too soon to tell exactly what the effects of the programs will be, or even how many people will end up applying. In Louisiana, about 90,000 people have registered for the program so far, but officials estimate that 123,000 houses were damaged or destroyed.
Mr. Leger, the Louisiana housing official, said the programs success would also depend on external factors, like how confident people are about the levees, and on how well New Orleans comes though the current hurricane season. In areas that are already starting to recover, the Road Home money will speed the process, he said.
In areas that were the most hard hit, were the most exposed and are still the most exposed, people will most likely take the buyout, he said.
In Mississippi, where water damaged or destroyed 31,000 houses outside of the flood plain, 16,500 people have signed up for the program, and state officials are already working to figure out how to spend any money left over, perhaps by helping people whose homes were in the flood plain but had inadequate insurance, or none at all.
Both states expect the average payout to be less than $100,000, and neither state expects to have any money left over.
The poor are far less likely to have insurance, experts say, which has given rise to complaints that the aid programs have not been designed to meet the needs of low-income families. The aid is part of the Community Development Block Grant program, which normally requires that 70 percent of aid be used to benefit low- and moderate-income families; Congress reduced that to 50 percent when it appropriated money for hurricane recovery, and allowed the secretary of Housing and Urban Development to waive that requirement.
Barbara Sard, director of housing policy for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal research group based in Washington, said that while the state programs would help low-income homeowners in Louisiana and Mississippi, she was dismayed that the federal government had done so little for renters, who were the majority of New Orleans residents.
The disproportion of the federal response strikes me as unbelievable, Ms. Sard said.
Louisiana is planning to use more than $1 billion of federal assistance to encourage the construction of new rental housing and the repair of apartments with low rents.
Some housing experts worry that, even with the grants, families may still need bank loans to rebuild their homes, especially now that construction costs are soaring along the Gulf and contractors are hard to find.
But banks may be reluctant to assume the risk of lending in the area, said Amy Liu, deputy director of the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution in Washington, which has been tracking the situation in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina.
The biggest fear is that families will do the math and realize they cant get enough financing to go home, Ms. Liu said.
Other factors will also influence their decisions, she added, including their perceptions of safety, schools and the availability of basic public services like water and electricity.
While acknowledging that Washington has never financed any housing recovery program of this scale before, federal officials say that the billions of dollars dedicated to the program pale in comparison with the scope of the destruction.
Our participation, the federal money, is just a catalyst, said Nelson R. Bregón, general deputy assistant secretary of the federal housing agency. At the end of the day, we foresee the private sector stepping in.
http://www.gadsdentimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060…
By LESLIE EATON
New York Times
Published July 17, 2006
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Nearly $10 billion in federal aid is finally starting to flow into the hands of people in Mississippi and Louisiana who lost their houses in last years hurricanes, the culmination of a year of political battling and bargaining between the states and Washington.
The money is widely considered the most important single factor in rebuilding the still-ruined landscapes of New Orleans and the other devastated Gulf areas of the two states. With it will come a test of what experts say is an unprecedented government effort to foster recovery from a natural disaster by giving taxpayer dollars directly to homeowners and allowing them to decide whether and where to rebuild or relocate.
Our belief is that this has never been done in this country, and certainly not on this scale, said Walter J. Leger Jr., a New Orleans lawyer who is the chairman of the housing task force for the Louisiana Recovery Authority, which developed the Road Home, as the states housing program is known. This may be the biggest redevelopment effort in history.
Outside experts agree that the level of direct assistance to individual homeowners is unprecedented. This is a dramatic shift in government policy, said Mary C. Comerio, a professor of architecture at the University of California, Berkeley, who has studied housing after disasters.
In Mississippi, the first round of up to $3 billion in checks should be in the mail within days, officials said, while Louisiana has just opened the first of 10 offices where homeowners will be walked through the process of applying for more than $6 billion in aid. Money is likely to start flowing in Louisiana late next month, officials there say.
On their faces, the two states plans look similar; each will give up to $150,000 in grants to the owners of houses that were damaged or destroyed by the storms. But the programs differ sharply in their details and in their goals.
In Mississippi, the focus is on compensating owners of damaged homes who did not have flood insurance because they were not in a flood zone. Once they have satisfied any liens or mortgage arrears, they can use the money almost entirely as they see fit. Though homeowners do not have to rebuild, state officials expect most to do so.
People have been dipping into savings, or they may need to restock their childrens college fund, said Scott Hamilton, a spokesman for the Mississippi Development Authority, which is running that states program. The state hopes to have some money available to help homeowners in the flood zone who did not buy insurance.
Louisianas leaders had a different goal in preparing their program, and were less focused on compensating homeowners than in rebuilding the state. Many Louisiana residents are still living in other states, debating whether to return, a problem Mississippi does not have. With far more damaged homes than Mississippi, but fewer that were wiped away outright, Louisiana wanted a program that would primarily induce homeowners to return to the state and begin rebuilding.
As a result, the state created a series of financial incentives to get them to do so. Those who sell and leave the state will get less money than those who stay and rebuild, though Louisiana will still give the full amount to those who return but build or buy elsewhere in the state. (Officials will not object if residents want to live in safer parts of the state.) And those who do stay can use the money for only one purpose.
We are not handing out checks, said Mike Byrne of ICF International, a company based in Fairfax, Va., that was hired by the state to manage the program, at a news conference last week. The money will be put into disbursement accounts administered by mortgage lenders, and will be doled out to homeowners only as repairs are made or as houses are rebuilt or bought, he said. The company will provide counseling to explain the complex arrangements to homeowners.
Under the Louisiana plan, the amount of money homeowners can receive will depend on the value of their houses before the storm and the amount of damage that is not covered by insurance. Loans and extra grants for raising houses off the ground and other preventive measures may also be available, subject to the $150,000 cap. Those who should have had insurance and chose not to do so will have their grants reduced by 30 percent.
An even larger chunk, 40 percent, will be taken out of the grants to people who want to sell their homes to the state and leave Louisiana. (Those who relocate within the state are not penalized.) But if a family sells its home to a private buyer, the program benefits can be transferred to the new owners if they promise to abide by its rules, including living in the house for three years from the time of the award.
In Mississippi, those who receive grants to cover their uninsured damage must agree to get flood insurance. They must also strictly adhere to local building codes, and elevate their houses to the levels set by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Both states are requiring extensive documentation of ownership and damage, and say they are making stringent efforts to prevent the kind of fraud that plagued FEMAs assistance after the hurricanes.
With so many people receiving money to rebuild at once, there has been widespread concern about the availability of legitimate contractors. Suzie Elkins, director of community development for Louisiana, said that contractors in the program would have to be licensed, and that a registry would be created where homeowners could tell others about their experiences with particular contractors. The state is also hoping to attract major construction companies and housing manufacturers, perhaps by offering them housing for employees, and training money will also be available.
Officials say it is far too soon to tell exactly what the effects of the programs will be, or even how many people will end up applying. In Louisiana, about 90,000 people have registered for the program so far, but officials estimate that 123,000 houses were damaged or destroyed.
Mr. Leger, the Louisiana housing official, said the programs success would also depend on external factors, like how confident people are about the levees, and on how well New Orleans comes though the current hurricane season. In areas that are already starting to recover, the Road Home money will speed the process, he said.
In areas that were the most hard hit, were the most exposed and are still the most exposed, people will most likely take the buyout, he said.
In Mississippi, where water damaged or destroyed 31,000 houses outside of the flood plain, 16,500 people have signed up for the program, and state officials are already working to figure out how to spend any money left over, perhaps by helping people whose homes were in the flood plain but had inadequate insurance, or none at all.
Both states expect the average payout to be less than $100,000, and neither state expects to have any money left over.
The poor are far less likely to have insurance, experts say, which has given rise to complaints that the aid programs have not been designed to meet the needs of low-income families. The aid is part of the Community Development Block Grant program, which normally requires that 70 percent of aid be used to benefit low- and moderate-income families; Congress reduced that to 50 percent when it appropriated money for hurricane recovery, and allowed the secretary of Housing and Urban Development to waive that requirement.
Barbara Sard, director of housing policy for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal research group based in Washington, said that while the state programs would help low-income homeowners in Louisiana and Mississippi, she was dismayed that the federal government had done so little for renters, who were the majority of New Orleans residents.
The disproportion of the federal response strikes me as unbelievable, Ms. Sard said.
Louisiana is planning to use more than $1 billion of federal assistance to encourage the construction of new rental housing and the repair of apartments with low rents.
Some housing experts worry that, even with the grants, families may still need bank loans to rebuild their homes, especially now that construction costs are soaring along the Gulf and contractors are hard to find.
But banks may be reluctant to assume the risk of lending in the area, said Amy Liu, deputy director of the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution in Washington, which has been tracking the situation in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina.
The biggest fear is that families will do the math and realize they cant get enough financing to go home, Ms. Liu said.
Other factors will also influence their decisions, she added, including their perceptions of safety, schools and the availability of basic public services like water and electricity.
While acknowledging that Washington has never financed any housing recovery program of this scale before, federal officials say that the billions of dollars dedicated to the program pale in comparison with the scope of the destruction.
Our participation, the federal money, is just a catalyst, said Nelson R. Bregón, general deputy assistant secretary of the federal housing agency. At the end of the day, we foresee the private sector stepping in.
http://www.gadsdentimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060…
ich kann gar nicht verstehen, daß hier nict viel mehr interessiert sind. wenn von den 10 mrd$ nur 1% bei IPII landen, dann ist das mehr als ein bisheriger Jahresumsatz. Ich bin der Meinung, daß wenn nicht der 3. Weltkrieg ausbricht, die USA zusammenbrechen o.ä. wir dieses Jahr noch neue Allzeithochs sehen werden.
hübscher pop heute # 12%, tropischer sturm auf texas im anmarsch
18,25 vorbörslich
Chris im Anflug
Press Release Source: Imperial Industries, Inc.
Imperial Industries, Inc. to Host Conference Call to Discuss 2006 Second Quarter Financial Performance and Operating Results
Tuesday August 8, 9:56 am ET
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., Aug. 8 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Imperial Industries, Inc. (Nasdaq: IPII - News; the "Company") today announced that it intends to release its financial results for the quarter and six months ended June 30, 2006 after the market closes on Monday, August 14, 2006. The Company will also host a conference call with the investment community Tuesday, August 15, 2006, at 9:00 am EDT to discuss second quarter 2006 results.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050330/FLW029LOGO )
To participate in the conference call, please dial 1-800-857-6258 a few minutes before 9:00 am EDT on Tuesday, August 15, 2006. The passcode for the conference call is "IMPERIAL." A replay of the conference call will be available from 11:00 am EDT on August 15, 2006 until 4:00 pm EDT on August 17, 2006. In order to listen to the replay, dial 1-888-566-0613. A replay of the conference call will be available on the Internet at the Company's website http://www.imperialindustries.com commencing 1:00 pm EDT on August 15, 2006.
Imperial Industries, Inc., a building products company, sells products throughout the Southeastern United States with facilities in the states of Florida, Georgia, Mississippi and Alabama. The Company is engaged in the manufacturing and distribution of stucco, plaster and roofing products to building materials dealers, contractors and others through its subsidiary, Premix-Marbletite Manufacturing Co. The Company through its subsidiary, Just- Rite Supply, Inc., is engaged in the distribution of the Company's manufactured products, as well as stucco, gypsum, roofing, insulation and masonry products manufactured by other companies. See our website at http://www.imperialindustries.com for more information about the Company.
Imperial Industries, Inc. to Host Conference Call to Discuss 2006 Second Quarter Financial Performance and Operating Results
Tuesday August 8, 9:56 am ET
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., Aug. 8 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Imperial Industries, Inc. (Nasdaq: IPII - News; the "Company") today announced that it intends to release its financial results for the quarter and six months ended June 30, 2006 after the market closes on Monday, August 14, 2006. The Company will also host a conference call with the investment community Tuesday, August 15, 2006, at 9:00 am EDT to discuss second quarter 2006 results.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050330/FLW029LOGO )
To participate in the conference call, please dial 1-800-857-6258 a few minutes before 9:00 am EDT on Tuesday, August 15, 2006. The passcode for the conference call is "IMPERIAL." A replay of the conference call will be available from 11:00 am EDT on August 15, 2006 until 4:00 pm EDT on August 17, 2006. In order to listen to the replay, dial 1-888-566-0613. A replay of the conference call will be available on the Internet at the Company's website http://www.imperialindustries.com commencing 1:00 pm EDT on August 15, 2006.
Imperial Industries, Inc., a building products company, sells products throughout the Southeastern United States with facilities in the states of Florida, Georgia, Mississippi and Alabama. The Company is engaged in the manufacturing and distribution of stucco, plaster and roofing products to building materials dealers, contractors and others through its subsidiary, Premix-Marbletite Manufacturing Co. The Company through its subsidiary, Just- Rite Supply, Inc., is engaged in the distribution of the Company's manufactured products, as well as stucco, gypsum, roofing, insulation and masonry products manufactured by other companies. See our website at http://www.imperialindustries.com for more information about the Company.
Press Release Source: Imperial Industries, Inc.
Imperial Announces Record Profits for the 2006 Second Quarter and Six-Month Periods and 13th Consecutive Profitable Quarter and Opening of New Distribution Facility
Monday August 14, 4:00 pm ET
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., Aug. 14 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Imperial Industries, Inc. (Nasdaq: IPII - News) announced record operating results for the second quarter and six-month periods ended June 30, 2006. The 2006 second quarter and six months profits were the Company's highest quarterly and semi- annual profits, respectively, in the past twenty-five years and the Company's thirteenth consecutive profitable quarter.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050330/FLW029LOGO )
Net sales for the second quarter ended June 30, 2006 were $20,436,000, compared to $17,443,000 for the same period in 2005, an increase of 17.2%. Net income for the second quarter ended June 30, 2006 was $1,116,000, or $.43 per diluted share, compared to $1,011,000, or $.40 per diluted share, for the same period of 2005.
Net sales for the six months ended June 30, 2006, were $40,469,000, compared to $34,035,000 in 2005, an increase of 18.9%. For the six months ended June 30, 2006, the Company generated net income of $2,197,000, or $.86 per diluted share, compared to $1,842,000, or $.73 per diluted share, for the same period in 2005.
The increase in net sales for the second quarter and six month periods was principally due to demand for Company products in the new and renovation housing and construction markets in the Company's principal trade areas in the Southeastern United States during the first half of the year. The Company continued to benefit from reconstruction activity in the Gulf Coast region because of property damaged by Hurricane Katrina. Also, the Company realized increased sales from new distribution facilities opened in 2005 and 2006.
S. Daniel Ponce, Imperial's Chairman of the Board, said: "We are pleased with operating results for the first six months of the year and remain committed to our strategy of expanding our business in markets with favorable long-term demographics. In August 2006, the Company opened a new distribution facility in Brooksville, Florida and is evaluating other expansion opportunities to profitably grow its business. We, as well as other companies in our industry, expect to face a more challenging operating environment in the future, due to current general economic conditions."
For more information, please refer to the Company's Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2006 which was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 14, 2006.
Imperial Industries, Inc., a building products company, sells products throughout the Southeastern United States with facilities in the States of Florida, Mississippi, Georgia and Alabama. The Company is engaged in the manufacturing and distribution of stucco, plaster and roofing products to building materials dealers, contractors and others through its subsidiary, Premix-Marbletite Manufacturing Co. The Company's subsidiary, Just-Rite Supply, Inc., is engaged in the distribution of stucco, gypsum, roofing, insulation and masonry products manufactured by other companies as well as the Company's manufactured products. See our website at http://www.imperialindustries.com for more information about the Company.
The statements in this press release contain certain forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Such statements, including those regarding, among other things, the success of the Company's sales and marketing efforts, improvements in productivity, the Company's strategy and future prospects, are dependent on a number of factors, including changes in economic, business, and competitive market conditions, and availability of financing, only some of which are within the Company's control. Actual results could differ materially from those currently anticipated due to a number of factors, including those set forth in the Company's Securities and Exchange Commission filings under "Risk Factors." The Company assumes no obligation to update forward-looking information to reflect actual results, changes in assumptions or changes in other factors affecting forward-looking information. A more detailed discussion of risks attendant to the forward-looking statements included in this press release are set forth in the "Forward-Looking Statements" and "Risk Factors" sections of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), and in other reports already filed with the SEC.
Imperial Announces Record Profits for the 2006 Second Quarter and Six-Month Periods and 13th Consecutive Profitable Quarter and Opening of New Distribution Facility
Monday August 14, 4:00 pm ET
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., Aug. 14 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Imperial Industries, Inc. (Nasdaq: IPII - News) announced record operating results for the second quarter and six-month periods ended June 30, 2006. The 2006 second quarter and six months profits were the Company's highest quarterly and semi- annual profits, respectively, in the past twenty-five years and the Company's thirteenth consecutive profitable quarter.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050330/FLW029LOGO )
Net sales for the second quarter ended June 30, 2006 were $20,436,000, compared to $17,443,000 for the same period in 2005, an increase of 17.2%. Net income for the second quarter ended June 30, 2006 was $1,116,000, or $.43 per diluted share, compared to $1,011,000, or $.40 per diluted share, for the same period of 2005.
Net sales for the six months ended June 30, 2006, were $40,469,000, compared to $34,035,000 in 2005, an increase of 18.9%. For the six months ended June 30, 2006, the Company generated net income of $2,197,000, or $.86 per diluted share, compared to $1,842,000, or $.73 per diluted share, for the same period in 2005.
The increase in net sales for the second quarter and six month periods was principally due to demand for Company products in the new and renovation housing and construction markets in the Company's principal trade areas in the Southeastern United States during the first half of the year. The Company continued to benefit from reconstruction activity in the Gulf Coast region because of property damaged by Hurricane Katrina. Also, the Company realized increased sales from new distribution facilities opened in 2005 and 2006.
S. Daniel Ponce, Imperial's Chairman of the Board, said: "We are pleased with operating results for the first six months of the year and remain committed to our strategy of expanding our business in markets with favorable long-term demographics. In August 2006, the Company opened a new distribution facility in Brooksville, Florida and is evaluating other expansion opportunities to profitably grow its business. We, as well as other companies in our industry, expect to face a more challenging operating environment in the future, due to current general economic conditions."
For more information, please refer to the Company's Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2006 which was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 14, 2006.
Imperial Industries, Inc., a building products company, sells products throughout the Southeastern United States with facilities in the States of Florida, Mississippi, Georgia and Alabama. The Company is engaged in the manufacturing and distribution of stucco, plaster and roofing products to building materials dealers, contractors and others through its subsidiary, Premix-Marbletite Manufacturing Co. The Company's subsidiary, Just-Rite Supply, Inc., is engaged in the distribution of stucco, gypsum, roofing, insulation and masonry products manufactured by other companies as well as the Company's manufactured products. See our website at http://www.imperialindustries.com for more information about the Company.
The statements in this press release contain certain forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Such statements, including those regarding, among other things, the success of the Company's sales and marketing efforts, improvements in productivity, the Company's strategy and future prospects, are dependent on a number of factors, including changes in economic, business, and competitive market conditions, and availability of financing, only some of which are within the Company's control. Actual results could differ materially from those currently anticipated due to a number of factors, including those set forth in the Company's Securities and Exchange Commission filings under "Risk Factors." The Company assumes no obligation to update forward-looking information to reflect actual results, changes in assumptions or changes in other factors affecting forward-looking information. A more detailed discussion of risks attendant to the forward-looking statements included in this press release are set forth in the "Forward-Looking Statements" and "Risk Factors" sections of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), and in other reports already filed with the SEC.
irgendjemand spielt mal wieder fußball mit der aktie. nach 18% umsatzplus und knapp 15% gewinnzuwachs muss die aktie natürlich über 20% in den keller. mit einem kgv von 9 ist IPII naütlich immer noch deutlich zu teuer.
DEBBY !
USA rüstet sich für den Tropensturm Ernesto
Fast auf den Tag genau ein Jahr nach dem Hurrikan Kathrina wird nun der Tropensturm Ernesto im Süden der USA erwartet. Der Bundesstaat Florida hat den Ausnahmezustand ausgerufen und Touristen gewarnt, die Inseln zu verlassen. Die Bevölkerung hortet Benzin, um bei Stromausfall Notstromaggregate betreiben zu können. Auf den Kaiman-Inseln hatte Ernesto Windgeschwindigkeiten bis zu 140 Stundenkilometern erreicht und für Überschwemmungen gesorgt. Nachdem sich der Hurrikan über Haiti auf einen Tropensturm abgeschwächt hatte, befürchten Wetterexperten, dass Ernesto nun wieder an Stärke gewinnt.
Wegen der anhaltenden Regenfälle befürchten die Behörden in Haiti heftige Erdrutsche in den hügeligen Gebieten der Insel. Am Wochenende war ein Frau in den Fluten umgekommen. Zuvor war Ernesto über die Dominikanische Republik hinweggefegt, wo er vergleichsweise geringe Schäden verursachte. Heftiger Regen behinderte den Verkehr in der Hauptstadt Santa Domingo.
http://www.euronews.net/create_html.php?page=detail_info&art…
Fast auf den Tag genau ein Jahr nach dem Hurrikan Kathrina wird nun der Tropensturm Ernesto im Süden der USA erwartet. Der Bundesstaat Florida hat den Ausnahmezustand ausgerufen und Touristen gewarnt, die Inseln zu verlassen. Die Bevölkerung hortet Benzin, um bei Stromausfall Notstromaggregate betreiben zu können. Auf den Kaiman-Inseln hatte Ernesto Windgeschwindigkeiten bis zu 140 Stundenkilometern erreicht und für Überschwemmungen gesorgt. Nachdem sich der Hurrikan über Haiti auf einen Tropensturm abgeschwächt hatte, befürchten Wetterexperten, dass Ernesto nun wieder an Stärke gewinnt.
Wegen der anhaltenden Regenfälle befürchten die Behörden in Haiti heftige Erdrutsche in den hügeligen Gebieten der Insel. Am Wochenende war ein Frau in den Fluten umgekommen. Zuvor war Ernesto über die Dominikanische Republik hinweggefegt, wo er vergleichsweise geringe Schäden verursachte. Heftiger Regen behinderte den Verkehr in der Hauptstadt Santa Domingo.
http://www.euronews.net/create_html.php?page=detail_info&art…
allmählich reicht es aber!
die aktie ist systematisch ausgebombt (gedrittelt) und hat jetzt ein forward p/e von ca. 6. die tun so, als ob nie wieder etwas gebaut oder saniert würde.
http://stockcharts.com/gallery/?ipii
irgendwann wird die gegenbewegung kommen.
die aktie ist systematisch ausgebombt (gedrittelt) und hat jetzt ein forward p/e von ca. 6. die tun so, als ob nie wieder etwas gebaut oder saniert würde.
http://stockcharts.com/gallery/?ipii
irgendwann wird die gegenbewegung kommen.
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