Archive for July, 2008

Mysterious East Van shop yields hidden bounty

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Darah Hansen
Sun

It was one of the great mysteries of Vancouver.

For years, city dwellers walking and driving past The Lido’s stylish old storefront on East Broadway have wondered just what was behind the perennially closed glass door.

Now, we finally have an answer.

Hidden among the retro furniture and 1950s-era electronics, the piles of mildewed clothes, rat droppings and a mountain of rusted tuna and salmon cans, was a treasure no one could have anticipated: $400,000 in Canadian bank notes circa 1930.

The money was uncovered earlier this year following the death of the building’s owner, an elderly German woman who lived in a small apartment above The Lido shop — at 518 East Broadway, just east of Main Street — for decades.

A cleanup crew hired to clear out the place — which operated sporadically as a deli and general store before closing for good more than a decade ago — found $950 in old $100 and $50 notes hidden under a rug.

But it was the caretaker who made the greatest discovery, stumbling on a bag containing a whopping $400,000 stuffed inside a bedroom closet.

“It was pretty amazing,” said Brendan Fuss, a driver with 1-800-GOT-JUNK.

Crews spent five days at the site removing enough furniture and garbage to fill 10 truckloads.

Inside, Fuss said, was “like a time warp.”

“There were some crazy retro things in there … nothing modern at all,” Fuss said.

Fuss said the banknotes found under the rug were so antiquated the young clean-up crew thought they were fake.

“They thought it was play money from a Milton Bradley game board. They were almost ready to bag it up and toss it in the garbage,” he said.

Fuss said the money was turned over to a chartered accountant working on behalf of the elderly woman’s family.

Also found in the house was a suitcase containing old German passports dating to the 1940s and ’50s, and a remarkable 15 cubic yards of rusted food tins — evidence of The Lido’s working history, though few in Vancouver can recall ever seeing the shop open for business.

“In its heyday, I think it was a specialty goods store,” said Craig Sexton, 1-800-GOT-JUNK’s general manager, who recalled visiting the store once in the early 1990s.

Vancouver coin dealer Brian Grant Duff called The Lido discovery an “incredible find,” adding that the recovered money could be worth as much as double its face value depending on the condition of the notes.

“The family,” Duff said, “should definitely check them with a reputable dealer before taking them to the bank.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Credit squeeze hits 40-year mortgages

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

New rules, including no zero-down loans, will cool real-estate market, curb first-time buyers, experts say

Fiona Anderson
Sun

A Cloverdale mortgage consultant says 85 to 90 per cent of first-time homebuyers have chosen a 40-year amortization. Photograph by : Steve Bosch, Vancouver Sun Files

Government aims to avoid housing meltdown like the one that hit U.S.

The federal government will no longer guarantee 40-year or zero-down mortgages in an effort to avoid a housing crisis such as the sub-prime mortgage meltdown that rocked the housing market in the United States. And that could cause British Columbia‘s housing market to cool even further.

In an announcement Wednesday, the government said government-backed mortgages would require a minimum down payment of five per cent and would be limited to a maximum amortization period of 35 years.

The borrower would also need a specified minimum credit score.

“Today’s announcement marks a responsible and measured approach by the government to ensure Canada‘s housing market remains strong and to reduce the risk of a U.S.-style housing bubble developing in Canada,” a release issued by the federal Department of Finance said.

All mortgages issued by federally regulated lenders with down payments of less than 20 per cent require insurance, and the government backs the insurance whether it is provided through the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. or private insurers, such as Genworth Financial.

So most low-down-payment mortgages will be affected, said Tsur Somerville, director of the centre for urban economics and real estate at the Sauder School of Business at the University of B.C.

And that will dampen B.C.’s already cooling housing market.

“The scuttlebutt is that lots and lots and lots of first-time buyers are using the 40-year [amortization option],” Somerville said. “So if you force them back to a 35-year, it means they are not going to be able to pay the same kind of price.

“So it definitely has a dampening effect on the marketplace.”

And the market has already showed signs of slowing so “this will certainly put more pressure to limit the growth of prices,” Somerville said.

Feisal Panjwani, a senior mortgage consultant with Invis in Cloverdale estimates that 85 to 90 per cent of his first-time buyers have chosen the 40-year option.

But most could qualify for a shorter term, he said. Instead they pick a 40-year period with lower payments so they have the flexibility to pay more than required but go back to the lower amount if they hit a rough patch, he said.

So the effect of shortening the amortization period may not be so bad. But taking away the zero-down option could have an effect on the market, he said.

“That zero-down program has been quite popular,” Panjwani said.

A survey by the Canadian Association of Mortgage Professionals last fall found that 37 per cent of borrowers surveyed had mortgages with amortization periods greater than the traditional 25 years, the organization’s president and CEO Jim Murphy said in an interview.

The results are not broken down by province but Murphy suspects the number is greater in B.C.’s Lower Mainland, which has the highest prices and the largest mortgages in the country.

“These are popular products,” Murphy said.

“So I think it’s big news. I think it’s important news … particularly in a market like the Lower Mainland where prices are high,” he added.

The new rules are to take effect Oct. 15, 2008 to allow existing mortgage pre-approvals to be used or expire, the government said in its release.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Fresh sheet is best of Grub

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Let them rustle you up some truly awe-inspiring dishes . . . with punch

Mark Laba
Province

At Grub, the menu offers a variety of thin-crust pizzas, but the best choices can be found on the blackboard, with its scrawl of fresh offerings every day. Photograph by : Gerry Kahrmann, The Province

Review

Grub

Where: 4328 Main St., Vancouver

Payment/reservations: Major credit cards, 604-876-8671

Drinks: Fully licensed.

Hours: Tues.-Sun., 5 p.m.-late; closed Mon.

It’s hard for a man without a 10-gallon hat, spurs on his heels and sagebrush in his moustache to actually say, “I’m gonna rustle up some grub.” Well, I think it’s high time to bring the tradition back, although maybe with a five-gallon instead of a 10-gallon hat, so as not to look so conspicuous. In my case all my 10-gallon (or should I say 3.785 litre) hats were left at the hat check at Al’s Possum Shack and Discotheque and I’d lost the stubs so all I had for grub-rustling was my Arrow Mach II poly-synthetic blend shirt. Which fitted the bill just fine when I stepped through the door of this new eatery, where the hip, minimal design and modular ’70s curvaceous plastic chairs matched the sleekness of the Mach II’s styling. I was like an otter in water once I fished the mothballs out of the breast pocket.

Pale wood tables, a bright-yellow bench seat running the length of one wall and unusual wallpaper with a pattern of small repeating doodles that reminded me of the hallucinations I once had when I accidentally OD’d on Neo Citran evoke both a contemporary and retro-modern design. The doodles appeared to incorporate a microwave oven, a cow and other things I couldn’t make out.

As eclectic as the surroundings, the menu is a perfect balance between comfort and creativity and the cocktail list positively old-fashioned as are the alcohol-injected punch bowls you can order for your table, guaranteed to enliven any gathering.

The key to this place is the daily fresh sheet, which is the real mainstay of the menu. Dishes change daily and the blackboard scrawls offer up meat, fish and veggie options. Nevertheless, there is one stable menu that offers a variety of thin-crust pizzas, a few salads, a charcuterie plate with meats and cheeses and a sharing plate of excellent bread, hummus and an olive tapenade. But the fresh sheet is where it’s at.

Peaches and I began with the incredible Grub Chopped Salad ($9), a permanent resident here, so have no fear of availability. It’s salads like this that make a nation great. No frou-frou Eurotrash shrubbery that’ll wilt if you look at it the wrong way — just good hefty romaine, cabbage, crispy bacon, rosemary-dusted ham, avocado, Roquefort cheese and devilled egg.

For mains, I picked jerk marlin with a tropical fruit salad, homemade coconut corn bread and candied yams ($16). Magnificent with a jerk spicing that had a slow-building heat, it’s like a tropical sunrise that takes its time to unleash its subtle powers. Paired with the sweetness of the yams and the cool bites of mango and pineapple, it was like my tastebuds were shooting the breeze in a hammock strung between palm trees on a secluded beach.

Peaches opted for the unbelievably good cumin-crusted rack of lamb with a wonderfully creamy mushroom and roasted red pepper risotto ($16). Lamb was perfectly cooked to that pinkish hue that all lamb lovers covet and the addition of a kumquat reduction for dipping lent a sweetness to the savoury meat.

A homemade dessert called a Boston Mini ($7) built from sponge cake layered with vanilla bean custard and topped with strawberries and chocolate sauce was a great finale. I would’ve like the sponge cake a touch lighter and the chocolate sauce warmer, but why quibble with such trivial matters when this is awe-inspiring grub-rustling for the 21st century.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

Cooking finesse without being fussy, and creative without losing the comfort factor.

RATINGS: Food: A Service: A- Atmosphere: A

© The Vancouver Province 2008

 

Building still booms in Vancouver

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Home starts on six-month high, but pace to slow before year’s end

Joe Couture
Province

Metro Vancouver home starts were up nine per cent in the first six months of 2008. Chris Wattie – Reuters

New-home construction in Vancouver has been even busier this year than last, despite a decrease in housing starts in B.C. in June, according to data the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. released yesterday.

Home starts in the Metro Vancouver area were up nine per cent during the first six months of 2008 compared to the same time period the year before.

The increases came mainly from starts of multiple-unit homes, which more than offset a decline in the number of starts of single-detached homes.

Still, by the time things shake out at the end of the year, CMHC predicts there will be 19,000 new starts in Metro Vancouver versus 20,700 last year.

“We’re expecting to see moderation this year overall, but still staying at very high levels,” said CMHC market analyst Robyn Adamache.

At the beginning of 2007, there were fewer than 100 new units available on the market in all of Metro Vancouver. Now there are about 300 new homes available — an increase, though still only one-third of the long-term average for new-home inventory, Adamache said.

“Inventory is starting to creep up — it’s not at the rock-bottom levels of last year,” she commented. The resale market is also better supplied, meaning home buyers now have “more choice everywhere,” she added.

That has an effect on the cost of buying a home — while prices are continuing to rise, the rate of growth is starting to slow, Adamache said.

While 2007 saw a 12-per-cent increase, prices have only risen this year by 10 per cent, and that is expected to taper off to eight per cent by year’s end.

The forecast for next year is five-per-cent price growth, Adamache added.

“The red-hot market is moderating, becoming more normal,” she said.

Home starts in the Abbotsford/Fraser Valley area were up by one-third in the first half of the year, boosted by numerous new townhouse and apartment projects breaking ground.

Starts in the province as a whole also are up over 2007, though the second quarter of 2008 saw a slowdown, most of which can be attributed to June.

In that month, starts in B.C. were down 10.8 per cent from June 2007.

Both single-detached and multiple-unit home starts were down overall. High land and building costs were two of the major factors contributing to the downward trend province-wide, according to CMHC.

Still, the number of homes under construction in the province is near a record high, according to Carol Frketich, CMCH’s regional economist for B.C..

Nationally, all provinces but Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia saw a decline in housing starts in June, and the country as a whole saw a 4.3-per-cent decrease in starts over May.

© The Vancouver Province 2008

 

New Rules for High Ratio Mortgages – notice from Government of Canada to take effect Oct 15, 2008

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Other

Government of Canada Moves to Protect, Strengthen Canadian Housing Market

The Government of Canada today announced adjustments to the rules for government guaranteed mortgages aimed at protecting and strengthening the Canadian housing market. The new measures include:

  • Fixing the maximum amortization period for new government-backed mortgages to 35 years;
  • Requiring a minimum down payment of five per cent for new government-backed mortgages;
  • Establishing a consistent minimum credit score requirement; and
  • Introducing new loan documentation standards.

Today’s announcement marks a responsible and measured approach by the Government to ensure Canada’s housing market remains strong and to reduce the risk of a U.S.-style housing bubble developing in Canada.

The new limits are planned to take effect October 15, 2008. This would allow existing mortgage pre-approvals with the common 90-day duration to be used or expire. Certain exceptions would also be permitted after October 15. The Government will work closely with all stakeholders to ensure timely and effective implementation of these measures.

As these measures relate only to new, government-backed insured mortgages, Canadians who already hold mortgages will not be affected by this announcement.

The measures announced today will build on the strength of Canada’s housing market. According to the International Monetary Fund, the increase in house prices in Canada is based on sound economic factors such as low interest rates, rising incomes and a growing population. A recent Statistics Canada report concluded that home ownership is at record levels, with over two-thirds of Canadians owning their own home.

Mortgage arrears—overdue mortgage payments—have also remained low. In recent years, the percentage of mortgages in arrears for three months or more continues to be at low levels not seen since 1990.  

Government of Canada Moves to Protect, Strengthen Canadian Housing Market

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Other

The Government of Canada today announced adjustments to the rules for government guaranteed mortgages aimed at protecting and strengthening the Canadian housing market. The new measures include:

  • Fixing the maximum amortization period for new government-backed mortgages to 35 years;
  • Requiring a minimum down payment of five per cent for new government-backed mortgages;
  • Establishing a consistent minimum credit score requirement; and
  • Introducing new loan documentation standards.

Today’s announcement marks a responsible and measured approach by the Government to ensure Canada’s housing market remains strong and to reduce the risk of a U.S.-style housing bubble developing in Canada.

The new limits are planned to take effect October 15, 2008. This would allow existing mortgage pre-approvals with the common 90-day duration to be used or expire. Certain exceptions would also be permitted after October 15. The Government will work closely with all stakeholders to ensure timely and effective implementation of these measures.

As these measures relate only to new, government-backed insured mortgages, Canadians who already hold mortgages will not be affected by this announcement.

The measures announced today will build on the strength of Canada’s housing market. According to the International Monetary Fund, the increase in house prices in Canada is based on sound economic factors such as low interest rates, rising incomes and a growing population. A recent Statistics Canada report concluded that home ownership is at record levels, with over two-thirds of Canadians owning their own home.

Mortgage arrears—overdue mortgage payments—have also remained low. In recent years, the percentage of mortgages in arrears for three months or more continues to be at low levels not seen since 1990.

Strength of the Canadian Housing and Mortgage Markets

Canadian housing and mortgage markets are performing well:

  • Demand for residential housing continues to be strong. For example, housing starts are expected to remain above the 200,000 mark for the seventh consecutive year.
  • The percentage of bank mortgages in arrears1 is stable at 0.27 per cent, near the lowest levels experienced since 1990 and well below the highs of 0.65 per cent experienced in each of 1992 and 1997.

The historically prudent and cautious approach taken by Canadian financial institutions to mortgage lending, combined with a sound supervisory regime, has allowed Canada to maintain strong and secure housing and mortgage markets. Sub-prime2 mortgage origination has been low in Canada, comprising less than 5 per cent of the market in recent years. As a result of the conservative approach taken by domestic lenders, and the resulting relative strength of the domestic housing and mortgage markets, Canadians have benefited from broad access to world-class mortgage finance products at competitive prices.

Recent Developments in the Mortgage Market

Since the fall of 2006, the mortgage markets have experienced a period of accelerated financial innovation. The marketplace has been quick to adopt these innovations, which permit such features as:

  • Longer amortization periods (from 25 years up to 40 years).
  • Higher loan-to-value ratio loans (up to 100 per cent).
  • Niche products for near-prime3 borrowers.
  • Streamlined loan documentation requirements with respect to borrowers’ income and employment.

What is Mortgage Insurance?

Mortgage insurance (which is sometimes called mortgage default insurance) is a credit risk management tool that protects mortgage lenders from losses on mortgage loans. If a borrower defaults on a mortgage, and the proceeds from the foreclosure of the property are insufficient to cover the resulting loss, the lender will submit a claim to the mortgage insurer to recover its losses.

Role of Mortgage Insurance

The law requires federally regulated lenders to obtain mortgage insurance on loans where homebuyers make down payments of less than 20 per cent of the purchase price of the home (i.e., high loan-to-value ratio loans). Lenders generally require high-ratio borrowers to pay for the premium for the mortgage insurance, which can be added to the mortgage balance.

Mortgages are sometimes insured after origination through what is often called “portfolio insurance.” High- and low-ratio4 mortgages are often combined to create a portfolio that is sold to investors (i.e., securitized).

How is the Government Involved in Mortgage Insurance?

Mortgage insurance is available to regulated and unregulated lenders in Canada from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) and from private mortgage insurers. Since CMHC is a Crown corporation, the Government is ultimately responsible for all of CMHC’s obligations including its mortgage insurance claims.

To make it possible for private insurers to compete effectively with CMHC, the Government also backs private mortgage insurers’ obligations to lenders through guarantee agreements that protect lenders in the event of default by the insurer. The Government’s backing of private insurers’ business that is eligible for the guarantee is subject to a deductible equal to 10 per cent of the original principal amount of the mortgage loan.

The New Mortgage Insurance Guarantee Framework

The new mortgage insurance guarantee framework will establish a boundary on the risk characteristics of the mortgage and of the borrower that are acceptable when the Government guarantees the mortgage insurance policy. These requirements will apply to all government-backed mortgage insurance policies (whether issued by CMHC or private insurers) for high-ratio mortgages5 on residential properties with up to four units.

The Key Amendments to the Mortgage Insurance Guarantee Framework

There are four mortgage and borrower characteristics that define the key parameters of the new mortgage insurance guarantee framework:

A) Loan-to-Value Ratio

Government-backed insurance is currently available on mortgages where the loan-to-value ratio is up to 100 per cent. This limit will be reduced to 95 per cent. Borrowers may borrow the 5 per cent down payment, but it will not be insured under the new guarantee framework.

B) Amortization Period

Amortization is the period or length of time it will take to pay off the entire mortgage loan. The amortization period should not be confused with the “term” of the mortgage, which sets out the period over which a fixed interest rate or variable rate option will apply. A typical mortgage has a term of five years but an amortization period that is usually much longer.

The maximum amortization period for mortgages insured with government backing will be reduced from 40 years to 35 years6.

C) Credit Score

A credit score is a numerical value that measures a borrower’s credit risk at a given point in time based on a statistical evaluation of information in the individual’s credit file. It has been proven to be predictive of loan performance and is considered by some mortgage insurers and lenders to be the single best determinant of default risk. Credit scores are well-established industry tools and are generated in Canada by three private firms.

Canadian lenders have not originated many government-backed mortgages for borrowers with low credit scores. To ensure this practice continues, the new framework will establish a credit score floor of 620. There will also be a limited “basket” to provide for exceptions to this rule, recognizing that there are some borrowers with credit scores below 620 that otherwise represent low credit risks.

D) Loan Documentation

The initiative also includes minimum loan documentation standards to ensure that there is evidence of reasonableness of property value and of the borrower’s sources and level of income.

E) Other Parameters

The new guarantee framework also includes other parameters that are required to give full effect to the initiative. These include:

  • Excluding high-ratio mortgages where no amortization is required in the first few years from the government guarantee.7
  • Setting a maximum of 45 per cent on borrowers’ total debt service ratio.8

Moving to the New Framework

The new mortgage insurance guarantee framework is planned to take effect October 15, 2008. This would allow existing mortgage pre-approvals with the common 90-day duration to be used or expire. Exceptions would be allowed after October 15 where they are needed to satisfy a binding purchase and sale, financing, or refinancing agreement entered into before October 15, 2008.

Consultations with the Mortgage Industry

During the transition period, the Department of Finance will consult with industry stakeholders about the implementation of the new mortgage insurance guarantee framework.


1 Most lenders generally consider a mortgage to be in arrears after three missed monthly payments.

2 A “sub-prime” borrower is one whose record of managing credit is weaker than the industry standard for mortgage lending.

3 The “near-prime” market is made up of borrowers whose record of managing credit is close to the industry standard for mortgage lending, but still below that standard.

4 “Low-ratio” mortgages are loans with a loan-to-value ratio of less than 80 per cent at the time of origination.

5 Less stringent requirements will also apply to low-ratio mortgages that are insured as portfolios.

6 Reducing amortization from 40 years to 35 years on a mortgage loan of $200,000 with a 6 per cent interest rate results in a $41 increase in a borrower’s monthly payment, but the borrower will save $49,000 in interest payments.

7 This includes high-ratio mortgages that begin with ”interest-only” payments and home equity lines of credit (HELOCs).

8 Total debt service ratio is the proportion of gross income that is spent on debt service and housing-related fixed or essential payments.

Rogers rolls out new iPhone plan after complaints

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Wojtek Dabrowski
Sun

In this file photo Apple Corporation CEO Steve Jobs speaks about the new iPhone 3G during his keynote speech at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, California June 9, 2008. Following criticism that its prices were too high for service plans for the eagerly anticipated Apple iPhone 3G, Canada’s Rogers Communications Inc has rolled out a promotional six-gigabyte data plan for C$30. REUTERS/Kimberly White

TORONTO – Following criticism that its prices were too high for service plans for the eagerly anticipated Apple iPhone 3G, Canada‘s Rogers Communications Inc has rolled out a promotional six-gigabyte data plan for C$30.

Rogers said on Wednesday the plan will be available to those who activate by August 31 on a three-year contract and can be added to any voice plans currently available. Rogers also said it will limit purchases of Apple Inc’s iPhone 3G, available Friday, to two per customer “due to anticipated high demand.”

Rogers‘ earlier announced iPhone plans for voice and data ranged from $60 to $115 and unleashed a barrage of complaints from across the country.

A Web site set up to protest the costs attracted thousands of signatures to its online petition, which was to be presented to Rogers on Friday.

Rogers spokeswoman Elizabeth Hamilton said the company heard the feedback from Canadians excited about the arrival of the iPhone, but turned off by the billing plans.

“We listen to customers. They’re exited about wireless. They’re excited about 3G devices. We heard them,” she said.

© Reuters 2008

 

Google lets users create virtual realms

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Sun

A screenshot of a room featured on Google’s new lively.com website. Photograph by : Google

Google has rolled out a challenge to virtual world giant Second Life with free software that lets people create their own online 3D worlds that can be embedded on websites and melded with other online functions.

Lively by Google lets people place virtual “rooms” on websites, customize “avatars” to be online proxies, and decorate their fantasy worlds with photos or streaming videos from YouTube, Picasa or other online sources.

The offering is a challenge to Second Life and other animated online worlds that require memberships and don’t let people take their creations elsewhere on the Internet.

“I’m wondering if this isn’t a bridge too far,” analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group said of Google expanding into virtual worlds.

“They are facing an awful lot of competition. It could be Google is anticipating the next wave on the Internet. We are not in the place where 3D is the way to render web pages, but we are heading there.”

With Lively, a user can adapt his personal online realm to his own imagination. Examples shown include hip flats, sprawling ranches, and rooftops backed by cityscapes.

Lively users can invite friends’ avatars over for visits by sending them online room addresses via email or instant messages, according to Google engineering manager Niniane Wang.

“If you enter a Lively room embedded on your favorite blog or website, you can immediately get a sense of the room creator’s interests, just by looking at the furniture and environment they chose,” Wang wrote in an online posting.

“You can also express your own personality by customizing your avatar’s look, showing people who you are without having to say a word. Of course, you can chat with each other, and you can also interact through animated actions.”

Lively code is available at www.lively.com and an application has been customized for the social-networking website Facebook.

© AFP 2008

 

Nothing funny about proposed hotel project

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

David Baines
Sun

In my May 21 column, I issued several cautionary notes to anybody who might be considering an investment in the proposed ParaYso Hotel project in downtown Vancouver.

“If you want to live dangerously, then the ParaYso Hotel project at 620 Seymour St. might be just the investment for you,” I said in my column.

Since then, I have made further inquiries which not only reinforce my initial view, they elevate it to the extreme-risk category.

The project is being developed by Graham Alexander through his company, Rancho Santa Monica Developments Ltd. As proposed, the project would be 14 storeys high and contain 91 suites. Total projected cost is $27 million.

To finance the project, Rancho Santa Monica is selling convertible debentures paying 10.75 per cent per year. At least one meeting has been held to solicit funds from investors.

As noted in my earlier column, my first concern is with Alexander. He worked as a computer salesman at Future Shop until December 1997 when he became licensed as a stock broker at Canaccord Capital. He worked there until May 2000 when he was fired.

The Investment Dealers Association of Canada conducted an investigation into his dismissal and in June 2003, Alexander signed a settlement agreement in which he admitted to several serious transgressions:

– In March 2000, he accepted an order from a client to buy 20,000 shares of a junior company for $48,049. The client told Alexander that a corresponding sell order for the same number of shares would be entered simultaneously through an account he maintained at another firm.

“Mr. Alexander accepted the order notwithstanding his concerns that doing so would constitute a manipulative trading practice,” the settlement agreement states.

– When the client failed to settle this transaction, Alexander agreed that if he deposited $8,000 into his account, he would give him another 40 days to settle the debit balance.

Alexander admitted he entered into this agreement “without the knowledge and consent of Canaccord.” When the account was finally liquidated, Canaccord was left with a $13,000 debit balance.

– The same month, another client told Alexander he wanted to sell 100,000 restricted shares of the same junior company for $150,000, and if Alexander found a buyer, he would pay him a finder’s fee of $15,000. Alexander arranged for a group of buyers (one of whom was a client) to buy the shares and collected $7,500 of the fee.

“Mr. Alexander had concerns that the purchase of the restricted shares would contravene provincial securities laws, but failed to notify Canaccord,” the settlement agreement states.

For these transgressions, Alexander was ordered to pay $35,000 in fines and costs, and he was slapped with a two-year licence suspension. He never returned to the brokerage business.

My second concern is with Alexander’s company, Rancho Santa Monica, which is trying to raise money to develop the property. Its shares are quoted on the over-the-counter markets in the United States (the pink sheets and the OTC Bulletin Board), but barely trade — the last trade was on May 21 at 89 cents.

The company has minimal operations. It manages an 11-suite hotel near Tulum on the Mayan Riviera. During the six months ending May 31, total revenues were $48,497 and the net loss was $2,519.

The only property the company owns is a piece of land behind the hotel, which it acquired in late 2005 for $80,000 in cash and notes. It is proposing to build another 15 suites on this property, but it is not clear where it will get the money.

The company’s most significant asset is an agreement to buy the property at 620 Seymour St., where the hotel will be located. Alexander has paid a $50,000 deposit on the total purchase price of $5.5 million. Another $2.45 million is due in installments over the next year, at which point the vendor will take back a $3-million mortgage.

As noted, Rancho proposes to finance the project by selling convertible debentures to investors, but the only security that is being offered to investors is a general charge over the assets of the company.

That amounts to virtually nothing. Due to Mexican law, the Tulum property cannot be pledged and there are severe resale restrictions. As for the Seymour property, the company won’t own it until April next year, when the last cash installment is due to be paid and the vendor provides a mortgage loan for the balance. In the meantime, investors are seriously exposed.

After I noted this, Alexander said he would try to alter the terms of the purchase agreement so investors could obtain a charge over the property. When I asked him later about this, he refused to answer the question:

“Why don’t you do a property search and see what has been registered on title in favor of our investors? Have you thought of that?” he goaded.

When I conducted a search, I noticed the agreement for sale is not registered on title. This strikes me as a significant omission. Registering the agreement would prevent the current owner from selling, transferring or encumbering the property without discharging the agreement.

I also noticed that Alexander had filed a caveat (a type of lien) on the property. The caveat refers to the purchase agreement and notes it did not specify that the $50,000 deposit was to be applied toward the purchase price, and the owner has refused to acknowledge that it did.

“On or around June 26, 2008, Alexander requested that the owner [L’Ena Enterprises Ltd.] return the $50,000 to Alexander, however, the owner has refused,” the caveat states.

The caveat also claims “a legal and beneficial interest in the property.” So, yes, the caveat helps protect investor interests pending resolution of these matters, but there is no assurance they will be decided in their favour. Indeed, the fact there is a dispute may not augur well for its eventual completion.

Another concern is that Alexander has not obtained the necessary permits from city hall to build the hotel. He says the company is in the “submission stage,” which may mean application has not even been made. The June 13 edition of Commercial Property News quoted Alexander as saying the project is in the “pre-application stage,” which indicates nothing has been filed yet.

A further concern is that Alexander announced on June 13 the company had “signed a letter of intent with the Onni group of Companies to build, joint venture and develop the hotel site in Vancouver.”

The release said the Onni Group, which has built well over $10 billion worth of developments across Canada, “is working with Rancho Santa Monica Developments to make this development a reality.”

This was indeed a coup for Alexander and his project. Unfortunately, it was incorrect. A few days letter, he retracted the release. The agreement had not been signed with Onni, but rather with Nick De Cotiis, a long-time former Howe Street promoter who has nothing whatsoever to do with Onni. In fact, he has been embroiled in a bitter and protracted dispute with those members of the De Cotiis family who are involved in Onni.

Asked how he could report that Onni had signed the letter of intent, Alexander replied: “Have you ever made an error in your life? I’m only human.”

My final concern is that I was unable to conduct a civilized exchange with Alexander. He was insulting, sarcastic, irrational and evasive. While he was an “up and coming developer,” I was an “untamed animal in the wild willing to write lies and misreps in order to get a cheap laugh.”

“People want to read about success stories, not an article written about some half insane reporter who will do anything possible to write a lambasting article on good people like myself,” he said in an e-mail.

“There is no one in Vancouver other than Mr. Baines himself who finds funnyness [sic] with what seems his querky [sic] sense of humor, to not print this at all.”

Alexander is wrong again. I don’t find anything remotely funny about him or his project.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 

Apple can’t sell its own iPhone in Canada

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Only an authorized carrier can sell it here

Gillian Shaw
Sun

If you want to buy one of the new 3G iPhones this Friday, don’t bother going to an Apple store

If you want to buy one of the new 3G iPhones this Friday, don’t bother going to an Apple store.

Unlike the United States where consumers could buy iPhones at Apple retailers as well as through the wireless carrier AT&T that carries the phones, in Canada consumers will have to buy from a Rogers Wireless or Fido retailer or one of the company’s authorized resellers.

“Unfortunately we won’t be selling it,” said Jamie Kerr, at Vancouver’s Simply Computing, an Apple retailer that has stores in six locations in British Columbia. “It’s because we are not an authorized cellphone carrier like Rogers or Fido.”

Future Shop, which sells cellphones and accompanying wireless plans, said it would like to carry the new iPhone but so far the answer from Rogers is no.

“It is part of Rogers’ retail strategy for the iPhone launch,” said Susan Kirk, spokesperson for Future Shop. “We are continuing to be in discussions with them.

“Our customer base is obviously tech savvy and would like to see it, so we are continuing to discuss it with them.”

Kerr said “tons of people” have been calling to see if the store will stock the iPhone.

“You can’t actually buy the phone without purchasing the plan,” she said. “This is kind of new — in the States where it was originally released you were able to go out and buy the iPhone on its own.”

Rogers, which also has the Fido brand, is the only network in Canada on which the iPhone can function. Many Canadians bought iPhones in the U.S. when there was no sign of their arrival in Canada and unlocked them for use on the Rogers or Fido network.

In the wake of the consumer backlash over Rogers’ pricing plans, online rumours suggest Apple is cutting shipments of iPhones to Canada and instead diverting them to Europe. Rogers has denied the rumour and said inventory has not changed since it announced the iPhone launch.

Meanwhile, Russell Gordon, a high school mathematics and computer science teacher in Ontario who launched the website www.getthefactsonrogersiphone.com, has launched a “lost customer” campaign.

His website has a coupon that he is urging consumers to fill out and drop off at a Rogers or Fido outlet on Friday.

It reads: “This slip represents one lost customer. I would have purchased an iPhone. I changed my mind due to the poor value of the Rogers/Fido voice and data plans.”

Another website attracting attention from disgruntled Rogers’ subscribers and would-be iPhone users, ruinediphone.com, has chalked up almost 700 Rogers customers who say they are abandoning the wireless carrier.

And in further bleak news, analysts at UBS Securities Canada lowered their target price for Rogers stock to $51 from $54 and for Telus from $46 to $43 as a result of the current wireless spectrum auction, which could see new competition in the wireless market in Canada. The analysts’ report said the lowered targets reflect the potential impact of an Ontario new entrant targeting the wireless consumer market and the increased risk of a “quasi-national new entrant anchored by Globalive, on its own or through possible partnerships with other new entrant license holders.”

The report has short-term sell ratings for Rogers and Telus, but the 12-month ratings remain unchanged for those companies.

“Short-term catalyst: we expect the near-term news flow after the auction could cause further downside for Rogers and Telus shares. Once the new entrant strategies are known and the partnership announcements are behind us, the focus will likely then turn to the new entrants’ progress and the challenges that the incumbents will create ahead of the new entrants, which may then help the shares recover,” the report said.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008