Saturday, August 30, 2014

Walmart Offers Health Care for $40

Walmart Offers Health Care for $40

Some Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE: WMT) locations have offered health care services since 2005 in about 100 stores. On Friday, the company opened its first Walmart-owned clinics in two Georgia stores, three South Carolina stores and four Texas stores.
At its website, Walmart promotes a $40 charge per visit, not including lab tests, immunizations and “other ancillary services associated with the visit.” The clinic offers primary care services as well as preventive services, and the company promotes this as an “expanded scope of services [that] enables us to be your primary medical provider.”
The Walmart-owned clinics are staffed by a certified nurse practitioner who may refer a patient to more advanced or specialized care and may in some states maintain a collaborative practice agreement with an independent physician. The clinics do not require an appointment, and the company accepts payment of both traditional Medicare and health insurance plans as well as the usual array of cash, checks and plastic.
While the idea of getting medical care at a Walmart supercenter may seem strange at first, it is well to remember that people who don’t have a primary care physician often use a hospital emergency room as an alternative. As many as half of all emergency room visits are made for non-emergency situations. Any cut to that number reduces the overall cost of medical care in the United States.
In a recent emergency room horror story, a New Jersey man was charged almost $9,000 for emergency room that included a tetanus shot, some antiseptic cream and a bandage. Now maybe Walmart doesn’t want to have bleeding patients walking into its stores, but many people who visit an ER with a cold or the flu could save a lot of money.


Read more: Walmart Offers Health Care for $40 - Wal-Mart Stores (NYSE:WMT) - 24/7 Wall St. http://247wallst.com/retail/2014/08/30/walmart-offers-health-care-for-40/#ixzz3Btb4sO4t
Follow us: @247wallst on Twitter | 247wallst on Facebook

Home-Flipping Collapses in San Francisco, Losses Spread

Home flippers are hardy folks who dive head-first into housing markets to buy homes at a discount from estimated market value, rehab them if they have to, trim the trees and cut the weeds out front, and flip the unit in less than a year, hopefully at a premium over estimated market value. If all works out, they’re rewarded with fat returns on investment.
It involves leverage, so some of the risks get shuffled off to the lender. It involves skills, connections, knowledge, and a good dose of luck. Above all, it requires the ability to buy low and sell high. To take home some serious dough, flippers need to purchase at double-digit discounts below “estimated market value” (based on AVM) and add enough value to sell at a premium over estimated market value. In the intervening months, home prices must also jump. So double-digit home price increases over the last two years have made flipping a lot more profitable. And easier.
This is the magic mix. If the conditions are met, the equation works out. It not, it’s a leveraged bet that can go to heck in a hand basket.
But flipping has started to run out of air in much of the country. And in the multi-county metro area of San Francisco, flipping collapsed in the second quarter, and flippers for the first time in years, started wading into red ink.
Home sales in the US have been declining since last fall, with mortgage applications plummeting at double-digit rates year over year. All sorts of excuses were dragged out of the closet, from tight inventories to bad weather, until inventories started to balloon and the weather was gorgeous, and sales were still dropping. Now it’s perfectly clear even to the most recalcitrant economists why: soaring prices have moved homes out of reach for many potential buyers. At first, the swoon in unit sales didn’t seem to have any impact on prices. But now the inevitable is happening: over the last few months, price increases have shriveled before our very eyes, and in some markets, on a monthly basis, outright price declines have started to crop up.
On Friday, in a section ominously titled, “Price Drops: ‘There’s Blood in the Water,’” Redfin reported on the growing prevalence in July of sellers having to lower listing prices as homes, rather than stirring up bidding wars, sit around for weeks or months. Redfin expects this trend to continue, with prices “potentially” declining month over month in September and October. “If that happens, it will be the first three-month price decline since the fall 2012,” it explained.
And our hardy home flippers, who dive head-first into these markets? They’re the first to notice when the water has been drained out of the pool. And flipping as a business model is suddenly no longer so appealing. Home sales overall are dropping, and flipping as a percent of total sales has swooned, and profits have come under pressure, and the time it takes to flip a home has soared, and year over year the volume of flips has plunged 61%. Money no longer grows on trimmed trees, freshly painted walls, and rehabbed bathrooms [read...  The Home-Flipping Bubble Implodes].
But real estate is local, and some flipping markets have been getting hit particularly hard while others still manage to hang in there.
In a new report, RealtyTrac listed the ten best and the ten worst markets for flipping in the second quarter. Across all markets, according to the report, flippers on average were able to buy properties 8% below their “estimate market value” (AVM) and sell them at 6% above their estimated market value. The worst market for flipping?
The multi-county metro area of San Francisco!
Flipping as a percent of total sales plunged by over one-third year over year to 5.6% of total home sales. As home prices soared to levels that made otherwise rational people giddy and incoherent, flippers ran out of an ingredient in the magic mix, namely being able to buy low. Or perhaps the paint wasn’t right, or the granite in the kitchen was the wrong color, and steep losses suddenly ruined the fun.
Last year in Q2, flippers in the San Francisco metro area still earned an ROI of a breathtaking 45%, on homes that were already high-dollar deals by national averages. But this year in Q2, it became apparent that, instead of buying low, they’d been buying high recently: at an average premium of 34% over estimated market value, according to RealtyTrac. But potential home buyers revolted against these prices. And flippers were forced to sell low, that is they could only sell at a 10% premium. And the average ROI dropped into the negative, to -9%.
Red ink also washed over the Las Vegas/Paradise metro area, a former can’t-lose-money-here flipper’s casino, where flipping in Q2 dropped to 8% of total sales, and the average ROI was -4%.
There were still plenty of markets in Q2 where flipping homes produced excellent returns for flippers who knew what they were doing, where buying low was still possible, and where subsequent home-price increases still played along. But Housing Bubble 2 is displaying more and more aspects of having run its course. And that includes trouble in new single-family homes: dropping sales, swooning prices, and ballooning inventories. Read…  Drowning in Unsold New Homes?

Friday, August 29, 2014

MOTHER-IN-LAW OF TERROR LEADER 'HONORED' HER DAUGHTER AND GRANDCHILDREN DIED AS HAMAS HUMAN SHIELDS: OFFERS BOTH OTHER DAUGHTERS

Zeian Asfura, the mother of Widad Deif, the wife of elusive Hamas leader Muhammed Deif, who, along with her two small children, were killed while sheltering in a Hamas hideout hit in an Israeli air strike that targeted the terror mastermind, told the Sunday Timeshe would only be too “honored” to marry off both of her other surviving daughters to Deif if it meant they could also be "martyred."

“It is an honor to have Deif a husband to any of my daughters and be a father to their children,” Asfura said
Deif’s fate remains unclear. Hamas continues to assert that Deif survived last week’s Israeli strike. Israel has remained silent. Deif’s mother-in-law said to the Times of Israelthat she was well aware of the possibility her daughter could be harmed as a result of marrying the notorious terrorist killer  back in 2011. “When I agreed to the marriage,” said Asfura, “I consented to a fate of martyrdom for my daughter."
Rather than condemn her terrorist son-in-law for his responsibility in the deaths of her daughter and two grandchildren, the 61 year old Asfura said she could not be happier. “Should Deif request the hand of any of my other daughters,” she said, speaking as though she believed Deif survived the strike, “I will happily consent and even if she, too, is martyred I will consent to the third.”


Deif is believed by Israel to have ordered the murder of hundreds of Israelis during a three-decade terror spree on behalf of the Gaza based jihadist terror group.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Trapped in Venezuela: Looking to Get Out? Good Luck!


Trapped in Venezuela: Looking to Get Out? Good Luck!
Every day, the cost of a plane ticket out of Venezuela goes up. That assumes you can get a plane ticket, and you probably cannot, even if you booked three months ago.  Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and Lufthansa cut the number of flights. Air Canada stopped all service. 

Economy class tickets to New York city cost as much as $3,000, if you can get them. And you probably can't. Instead, people take five-day rides to Lima, Peru as a means of escape. And that takes money as well.

The result is best described as Trapped in Venezuela
With the cash-strapped government holding back on releasing $3.8 billion in airline-ticket revenue because of strict currency controls, carriers have slashed service to Venezuela by half since January, adding another layer of frustration to daily life here.

The lack of flights is complicating family vacations, business trips and the evacuation plans of Venezuelans who want to leave the country, which is whipsawed by 60% inflation, crime, food shortages and diminishing job prospects. Steve H. Hanke, a Johns Hopkins University economics professor, says Venezuela tops his so-called "misery index," which takes into account inflation, unemployment, economic stagnation and other factors in 89 countries.

"In Venezuela, you have the sensation that you can't leave," says Virginia Hernández, a Venezuelan who is studying orthodontics in Argentina. During a recent trip to see family in Caracas, she wound up marooned. The Venezuelan state-run carrier Conviasa had no plane available to fly its scheduled Caracas-to-Buenos Aires route, and other airlines servicing Argentina had sold out their flights.

The Caracas polling company Datanalisis found that one in 10 citizens—most of them middle- and upper-class Venezuelans between 18 and 35—are seeking to leave the country, more than double the number who sought to abandon it in 2002, which was marked by an unsuccessful coup attempt against then President Hugo Chavez and a paralyzing oil strike.

Travel agents are swamped with requests but turn customers away because there are no tickets to sell. Some travelers are left taking the bus, with trips to Lima, Peru, a five-day journey, now packed with middle-class Venezuelans who used to fly.

Many Venezuelans who want to leave the country simply can't. Tickets for short flights to other transit hubs in the region, such as Panama City or Bogotá, are difficult to come by.

On top of that, stringent currency controls mean that Venezuelans have access to only $400 a year, making it nearly impossible to pay the high prices airlines demand for tickets on the Web.

"Just about all of my friends want to get out of here," said Roberto Villarroel, a 19-year-old university student who wants to move to Argentina. "I'm still looking for a ticket, though. The prices go up every day."

Some Venezuelans, particularly those who are affluent, are paying whatever price is required to leave.

Rafael Larrazabal, a 44-year-old businessman, could find only first-class tickets on Delta, and he purchased them months in advance. On a recent day, he, his wife and two young children boarded a flight to Atlanta and then Berlin, where they plan to start anew.

"What's the future here?" remarked Mr. Larrazabal at a tearful family send-off. "The country is not functioning. There's crime. I said, 'Let me see if I can get out of here alive and then see what happens.'"
That's hyperinflation folks, a complete collapse of faith in currency. People think it's going to happen to the US. They are crazy.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Everything you wanted to know about Gaza ceasefire but were afraid to ask

From ports to building materials and aid, a review of the immediate and long term articles stipulated by the ceasefire deal which ended 50 days of bloody conflict
Reuters
Published: 08.27.14, 14:52 / Israel News
Israel and the Palestinians agreed to an Egyptian-brokered plan to end the fighting in Gaza after 50 days of combat in which more than 2,100 Palestinians, most of them civilians, 64 Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed.

Following are the broad parameters of the agreement, provided by Israeli and Palestinian officials.



As part of the deal, both sides have agreed to address more complex issues - including the release of Palestinian prisoners and Gaza's demands for a sea port - via further indirect talks starting within a month.

Immediate steps


  • Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza agree to halt all rocket and mortar fire into Israel.

  • Israel will stop all military action including air strikes and ground operations.

  • Israel agrees to open more of its border crossings with Gaza to allow the easier flow of goods, including humanitarian aid and reconstruction equipment, into the coastal enclave. This was also part of a ceasefire agreement after the last conflict between Israel and Hamas in November 2012, but was never fully implemented.

  • In a separate, bilateral agreement, Egypt will agree to open its 14 km (8 mile) border with Gaza at Rafah.

  • The Palestinian Authority, headed by President Mahmoud Abbas, is expected to take over responsibility for administering Gaza's borders from Hamas. Israel and Egypt hope it will ensure weapons, ammunition and any "dual-use" goods are prevented from entering Gaza. They also expect tight monitoring of imports of construction materials like cement and cast iron to make sure they are used to rebuild or build homes rather than tunnels that have been used to attack Israel.

  • The Palestinian Authority will lead coordination of the reconstruction effort in Gaza with international donors, including the European Union, Qatar, Turkey and Norway.

  • Israel is expected to narrow the security buffer - a no-go area for Palestinians that runs along the inside of the Gaza border - reducing it from 300 meters to 100 meters if the truce holds. The move will allow Palestinians more access to farm land close to the border.

  • Israel will extend the fishing limit off Gaza's coast to six miles from three miles, with the possibility of widening it gradually if the truce holds. Ultimately, the Palestinians want to return to a full 12-mile international allowance. This was also part of the previous ceasefire deal in 2012, and was briefly implemented before being rescinded in March 2013.


Longer term issues to be discussed


  • Hamas wants Israel to release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners rounded up in the occupied West Bank following the abduction and killing of three Jewish seminary students in June, an attack that led to the war. Hamas initially denied involvement in the killings, but a senior Hamas official in exile in Turkey last week admitted the group did carry out the attack.

  • President Abbas, who heads the Fatah party, wants freedom for long-serving Palestinian prisoners whose release was dropped after the collapse of peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. 

  • Israel wants Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza to hand over all body parts and personal effects of Israeli soldiers killed during the war. 

  • Hamas wants a sea port built in Gaza, allowing goods and people to be ferried in and out of the enclave. Israel has long rejected the plan, but it is possible that progress towards it could be made if there are absolute security guarantees. In antiquity, Gaza was a major port in the eastern Mediterranean, a critical point for spice trading. There have been plans to build a new port since the Oslo peace accords in the mid-1990s, but no progress has been made. 

  • Hamas wants the un-freezing of funds to allow it to pay 40,000 police, government workers and other administrative staff who have largely been without salaries since late last year. The funds were frozen by the Palestinian Authority. 

  • Israel has in recent weeks said it wants the full "demilitarization" of Gaza. The United States and European Union have supported the goal, but it remains unclear what it would mean in practice and Hamas has rejected it as unfeasible. It is possible that Israel will raise it again as talks progress. 


New York risks 'return to bad old days'

New York risks 'return to bad old days'

AFP 
Police officers patrol the Brooklyn Bridge on August 25, 2014 in New York City
.
View photo
Police officers patrol the Brooklyn Bridge on August 25, 2014 in New York City (AFP Photo/Spencer Platt)
New York (AFP) - New York is hurtling back to "the bad old days of high crime" under current Mayor Bill de Blasio, a major police union has warned, drawing a sharp rebuke from the Democrat.
"The degradation of our streets is on the rise," said Ed Mullins, president of the Sergeants Benevolent Association, urging the Democratic Party to choose another city to hold its 2016 convention.
In a full-page open letter in The New York Times, Mullins said that the city was "lurching backwards to the bad old days of high crime, danger-infested public spaces, and families that walk our streets worried for their safety."
Mullins, whose association claims to be the largest senior police officers' union in the United States, said that shootings had jumped 13 percent citywide since last year.
He accused de Blasio of making "dangerous choices" and said that the New York Police Department (NYPD) was "understaffed, overworked and underpaid."
De Blasio swiftly refuted the claims, declaring: "We are the safest big city in America. It's a well-established fact.
"We are the safest big city in America because we have the finest police force in America -– I've said it many times."
Crime was down 3.5 percent compared to this time last year, he said.
"We do have some problems with crime to address, for sure, we always have challenges," he said.
"But the good news is, and the clear evidence is, the NYPD is getting the job done and the city is safe -- in many ways safer than ever -- and we're continuing to make progress."
De Blasio accused the union of attempting to "advance their position in contract negotiations" and of fear-mongering.
"And I think that it's an irresponsible act on their part," he thundered.

Spreading criticism of government acceptance of Gaza truce

Spreading criticism of government acceptance of Gaza truce 
DEBKAfile August 27, 2014, 9:06 AM (IDT)
Heads of local councils in southern Israel say they will think twice before opening the school year and telling citizens to return home, because they don’t trust the truce deal the Netanyahu government struck with Hamas. The truce, which went into effect Tuesday night, has stirred a storm of criticism. Some called it “capitulation to terror.” Eshkol District council head Haim Yellin told a radio interviewer Wednesday that the ministers should have made their decisions from the south, instead of sitting in Jerusalem. Individually, they may be amazing people, he said, but the government as a collective was “one big circus.” 

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Anti-Semitic flyers distributed throughout Jewish suburbs in Sydney


Anti-Semitic flyers distributed throughout Jewish suburbs in Sydney

Residents of Bondi Beach and Double Bay, which contain large numbers of Sydney’s 40,000-plus Jewish community, found flyer in their mailboxes on Monday.

Aug. 26, 2014 | 2:21 PM
A rally in Sydney against Israel's military campaign in Gaza on, August 3, 2014.
A rally in Sydney against Israel's military campaign in Gaza on, August 3, 2014. Photo by AFP
Anti-Semitic flyers were dropped in the mailboxes of private homes in Jewish suburbs in Sydney.
Residents of Bondi Beach and Double Bay, which contain large numbers of Sydney’s 40,000-plus Jewish community, found the flyer in their mailboxes on Monday.
“Wake up Australia,” reads the flyer. “Jews have been kicked out of countries 109 times through history. … Could it be that having them in a European country is harmful to the host?”
The flyer included an invitation to join Squadron 88, a local white supremacist group, and included a reference to Stormfront.org, a neo-Nazi website.
“The flyer is an appalling litany of racist stereotypes, all too predictable from neo-Nazi organizations,” said New South Wales Jewish Board of Deputies chief executive Vic Alhadeff. “It’s no coincidence that 88 – which appears on the flyer – represents HH, which stands for Heil Hitler.”
The flyer also reads: “The Jews own all Hollywood studios & 97% of US newspapers and media. Any movie or tv show you watch may well be coming straight from Israel.”
Malcolm Turnbull, the Communications Minister whose electorate includes the two suburbs, condemned the flyer as “a crude and vicious attempt to intimidate and insult the Jewish community.”
He added: “We are the most successful and harmonious multicultural society in the world today…Racism must be opposed, called out and condemned wherever it is found.”
Alhadeff said his organization had registered a complaint with Facebook, but the social media platform said it had reviewed the Squadron 88 page and it “doesn’t violate our community standards.”
“It is very disappointing that Facebook fails to grasp the import of what is expressed in the flyer,” Alhadeff said. “If the people at Facebook who are tasked with monitoring its standards don’t consider this flyer to be hate speech, what is?”
The flyers – which are being investigated by police – are the latest in a spike of anti-Semitic incidents recorded in Australia since the start of the war in Gaza over two months ago.