Hovnanian’s Debt Is Drag As Housing Heals

HOVNANIAN’S DEBT IS DRAG AS HOUSING HEALS
JAMES R. HAGERTY and DAWN WOTAPKA

Wall Street Journal

Builder Still Feels Effect of Market’s Fall Even as Rivals Start to
Buy Again; Founder’s Death Comes as Blow

As the U.S. housing market shows tentative signs of healing, some
of the nation’s biggest home builders are starting to acquire land
again in preparation for better times. But one builder is hobbled
going into this land grab: Hovnanian Enterprises Inc.

Founder Kevork Hovnanian, who died last week at 86, is shown at left
at the builder’s 2001 transfer to the NYSE.

Associated Press

The nation’s sixth-largest home builder in terms of the number of
sales completed last year, Hovnanian is still trying to recover from
its post-boom malaise. Late last week, the company suffered another
blow with the death of its founder and chairman, Kevork Hovnanian,
86 years old. His son, Ara, 52, remains chief executive, a post he
has held since 1997.

A spokesman declined to comment on when a new chairman will be named
or how the death might affect the family’s controlling stake in
the company.

Hovnanian took on more debt and made more acquisitions near the top
of the housing bubble than most big rivals.

Now, the Red Bank, N.J., company is struggling to return to
profitability in time to pay down debt and take advantage of potential
bargains as banks unload foreclosed land.

"The company is caught in a tough spot," said David Goldberg, an
analyst at UBS Investment Bank in New York.

Asked to comment on the company’s financial strains, a Hovnanian
spokesman said that "we have been in business for 50 years and
successfully navigated through numerous housing cycles."

Early last week, Hovnanian sought to ease its debt burden by offering
to repurchase as much as $759 million of debt that was due to be
repaid over the next eight years. To finance the purchases, the
company is likely to issue new bonds maturing in eight to 10 years,
said Vincent Foley, an analyst at Barclays Capital in New York.

That would leave the company f its debt that otherwise would have
occurred in 2013.

The debt restructuring "buys them a lot more time and some
flexibility," said Ivy Zelman, chief executive of Zelman & Associates,
a research firm. But Hovnanian still "won’t have nearly as much dry
powder to put to work" on land purchases compared to most of its big
rivals, she said.

As of July 31, the end of its fiscal third quarter, Hovnanian’s net
debt stood at 109% of total capital, far above the average of 26%
for the 12 big home builders tracked by Zelman & Associates.

[Sales at a Hovnanian tower in Jersey City were hurt by Wall Street
cutbacks.] The Wall Street Journal

Sales at a Hovnanian tower in Jersey City were hurt by Wall Street
cutbacks.

Other builders are boasting of their ability to seize on land
bargains. Lennar Corp. said it spent $77 million to buy lots in
Florida, Texas, California and elsewhere in its fiscal third quarter
ended Aug. 31, up from $58 million in the prior three months.

Lennar also invested $140 million for a 15% stake in a California-based
land-development company, the purchase of several communities
previously owned by that company, and the settlement and release of
any claims.

Despite the spending, Lennar’s net debt stands at about 36% of capital.

Hovnanian spent $37 million on land in its latest quarter and has
insisted it will be able to purchase more land as opportunities arise,
partly by teaming up with financial partners.

Some of its past purchases were ill-timed. Hovnanian made six
acquisitions of smaller builders between November 2003 and April
2006. Four were in Florida, now widely considered to be the nation’s
weakest housing market.

For instance, in August 2005 Hovnanian bought First Home Builders
of Florida, which operated in the Cape Coral-Fort Myers area of
southwestern Florida, on undisclosed terms.

At the time, Hovnanian said population growth and a healthy job market
"make Florida an attractive market for the foreseeable future."

Within a few months, home sales in Florida began to stall. Since pe in
mid-2006, prices in the Cape Coral-Fort Myers area have plunged 50%,
according to First American CoreLogic. In 2007, Hovnanian announced
a write-off of $107.7 million of assets related to the Fort Myers
operations.

In another investment, Hovnanian began construction in 2007 on
its biggest tower, a 48-story condominium project called 77 Hudson
in Jersey City, N.J., near Manhattan. A sharp drop in Wall Street
employment has made it harder to find buyers for the tower’s 420 units,
according to real-estate agents.

"It’s the right building at the wrong time," said David Bartz, an
agent who does business in Jersey City, where many condo buildings
sprouted during the boom.

Hovnanian was founded in 1959 by the elder Mr. Hovnanian and three
brothers, ethnic Armenians who immigrated to the U.S. from Iraq.

The company initially focused on New Jersey and later branched out to
neighboring states and Florida. For a time, it built mainly low-cost,
cookie-cutter developments.

Hovnanian now builds homes in 18 states, up from seven in the late
1990s. While some builders focus on either the high or low end of
the market, Hovnanian tries to be a jack of all trades, with houses
at most price points. It also builds communities for older people.

The company has reported losses of more than $2.3 billion over the past
three years. Daniel Oppenheim, an analyst at Credit Suisse, projects
a further loss of $305 million for the year ending Oct 31, 2010.

Hovnanian has responded to the red ink by slashing its work force to
1,891 in July from 6,870 three years earlier. Hovnanian’s stock-market
value has plunged to about $314 million from a peak of about $4.8
billion in July 2005.

Despite its troubles, UBS’s Mr. Goldberg cautions investors against
writing off Hovnanian. "It’s not clear how this is going to play out,"
he said.

Obama, Erdogan discuss Armenia-Turkey relations

Obama, Erdogan discuss Armenia-Turkey relations

armradio.am
26.09.2009 13:50

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met with U.S. President
Barack Obama on Friday.

Erdogan, who attended G-20 Summit in Pittsburgh, held a meeting with
Obama after the summit.

The parties discussed problems in the Middle East as well as Turkey,
Armenia and Azerbaijan relations.

Obama told Erdogan that the recent developments in Turkey-Armenia
relations were positive, and he stressed the importance of these
relations for the region.

Erdogan and Obama also dwelt on the Karabakh issue. Erdogan said that
it would make things easier if the Minsk Group was involved in the
solution process more actively, Turk.net reports.

MoD refutes the recurrent misinformation of Azerbaijan

Armenia’s Ministry of Defense refutes the recurrent misinformation of
Azerbaijan

armradio.am
26.09.2009 13:56

The Spokesman for the Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan Eldar SabiroÄ?lu
came forth with a recurrent misinformation on September 25, where he
mentions that 10 Armenian soldiers have been killed during military
exercises over the past year because of bad management, and 76 soldiers
have refused to participate in the last military exercises.

In response to the false information of Azerbaijan, which has already
become a usual thing, the Defense Ministry of Armenia announces that
the information disseminated by SabiroÄ?lu is a complete lie. It has no
connection with the reality and is simply the result of the sick
imagination of the Spokesman of Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Defense.

The Armenian Ministry of Defense advices the military leadership of
Azerbaijan to get busy with the poor state of their own army and stop
the inhumane morals and manners instead of presenting the dreams for a
reality and spreading ridiculous lies.

FM and OSCE MG discussed upcoming meeting between Presidents

Edward Nalbandyan and OSCE MG discussed upcoming meeting between
Armenian and Azeri Presidents
26.09.2009 11:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On September 26, RA Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandyan paid a working visit to New York to meet with OSCE MG
Co-Chair Yuri Merzlyakov, Bernard Fassier, Robert Bradtke and personal
representative of OSCE Chairman-in-Office Anjey Kasprchik.

Welcoming US Co-Chair on his new appointment, RA FM expressed hope
that his experience and skills would be useful in Karabakh settlement
process.

The meeting which lasted about 2 hours focused on issues concerning
Karabakh conflict. Parties considered possibility of co-chairs’ visit
to the region with the purpose of arranging upcoming meeting between
Armenian and Azeri Presidents, RA MFA press service reports.

G. Petrosyan: Turkey is a hostage to its own promises to Azerbaijan

Georgy Petrosyan: Turkey is a hostage to its own promises to
Azerbaijan
24.09.2009 20:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenians and Turkey have many problems and
complicated knots, which affect today our daily lives, the NKR Foreign
Minister Georgy Petrosyan said.

"I wish the process of approach was not a matter of gambling but
serious negotiations and meetings also were held between people of two
countries, in order to make our positions clear-cut and precise and to
come to mutual understanding.

These tangled points on the whole relate not only to Armenians and the
Armenian world. In connection with the Karabakh events, I can say that
it was in the period of the modern history that Karabakhi people
raised a political question. Since 1988, in fact on the threshold of
dissolution of the USSR, we have witnessed certain events in the
territory of Azerbaijan in connection with the Armenian population: of
course passions have been fanned again, wounds opened, and if it was
not a preparatory step to commit genocide, then what was that? Today
there are different comments concerning those issues: official,
humanitarian, etc. These are the questions that seriously influence
human memories, future policy and possibilities to establish
good-neighborly relations. It’s evident that nobody will leave this
territory. Common edges must be found in this territory which must be
based on human rights, as well as on the right of people in
general. This is the most significant thing.

In addition, in the present situation we see that Turkey’s
high-ranking officials directly try to connect these two issues
together: Nagorno-Karabakh problem and the problem of Armenian-Turkish
relations. It does not contribute to the settlement of the problem, as
Turkey has obviously become the hostage of his promises given to
Azerbaijan in due course, and this very directly and clearly shows
that Azerbaijan exerts pressure. Willy-nilly Turkey becomes a
concerned party once again insisting, that without this, this and
that, it is impossible to achieve any positive result. This is also
perceived as a means of pressure; however any display of pressure can
hardly ensure positive results.

I think these days set the beginning of the future, when Karabakhi
officials will have an opportunity to get in touch not only with
journalists, but also with the politicians of different
countries. Restrained and calm political dialogues and discussions
will be very productive,’ Georgy Petrosyan said.

Noted Jefferson scholar, UVa professor dies

Charlottesville Daily Progress

Noted Jefferson scholar, UVa professor dies

By Brian McNeill

Published: September 25, 2009

Merrill D. Peterson, a noted Thomas Jefferson scholar and University
of Virginia history professor, died Wednesday in Charlottesville.

He was 88.

Peterson was author or editor of 37 books, including the definitive
Library of America edition of the writings of Thomas Jefferson and a
1994 study of Abraham Lincoln titled `Lincoln in American Memory’ that
was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.

UVa’s Board of Visitors established a professorship in his name eight
years ago, calling him `without a doubt the most distinguished living
Jefferson scholar in the country.’

Peterson’s scholarly work focused primarily on Jefferson and what he
called the `second generation of American statesmen,’ as well as on
Lincoln and his place in `American thought and imagination.’

His first book, `The Jefferson Image in the American Mind,’ won the
Bancroft Prize ‘ one of the most prestigious awards in American
history ‘ in 1961.

His second book, which Peterson considered his best, was a biography
of Jefferson called `Thomas Jefferson and the New Nation.’

`His one-volume biography of Thomas Jefferson is still considered
among the very best that have ever been written on our university’s
founder,’ Edward Ayers, a historian and former dean of the College and
Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, said in 2005.

Peterson’s son, Jeffrey W. Peterson of Falls Church, said: `He had a
real consciousness of the importance of American democracy and how
individuals can make an important contribution to that.’

Peterson added that his father sought to live a life of public
service.

`He always set for us a really good example of doing things for
others,’ he said.

At the age of 76, Peterson volunteered with the Peace Corps and served
in Armenia. Before leaving, he told The Daily Progress that he decided
to join the Peace Corps after receiving a brochure in the mail.

`I noti
said. `I’ve really had very little experience as a volunteer outside
the academy. I think I would like to be in a situation where I have a
sense that I am serving and making a contribution.’

He was the second oldest Peace Corps volunteer serving at the time.

Peterson’s time in Armenia inspired a book he wrote after returning,
`Starving Armenians: America and the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1930.’

In 2005, Peterson became the eighth recipient of the Library of
Virginia’s lifetime achievement award, which recognizes Virginia
writers, living or dead. Previous recipients included Booker
T. Washington and Edgar Allan Poe.

Peterson joined UVa as the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Professor of
History in 1963.

He served as dean of the faculty of the College of Arts & Sciences
from 1981 to 1985. And he was elected professor emeritus upon his
retirement from UVa’s faculty in 1987.

A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Rotunda Room
of Westminster-Canterbury of the Blue Ridge.

Among the service’s speakers will be Daniel P. Jordan, the retired
head of Monticello. Jordan studied for his doctorate under Peterson
and was a longtime friend.

Jordan could not be reached for comment Thursday. Jordan’s wife, Lou
Jordan, however, said Peterson was an outstanding scholar and that her
husband said of Peterson, upon hearing of his death, `We owe him a
lot.’

Armenia Debates Landmark Deal With Turkey

ARMENIA DEBATES LANDMARK DEAL WITH TURKEY
By: Emil Danielyan

Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume:
September 23, 2009 11:55 PM

Category: Eurasia Daily Monitor, Home Page, Foreign Policy, Turkey,
Armenia, Featured

Yerevan’s fence-mending agreements with Ankara, which are expected
to be signed by October 14, have generated lively and bitter debates
among Armenia’s leading political groups. Although many of them have
voiced misgivings about key parts of the deal, President Serzh Sargsyan
should have no trouble in securing its mandatory ratification by the
Armenian parliament. Nor is Sargsyan likely to face serious short-term
threats to his rule emanating from Turkish-Armenian rapprochement.

The most vocal critics of the process, notably the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (ARF, also known as the Dashnak Party),
lack either the strength or desire to fight for regime change in
the country. Their concerns about the two Turkish-Armenian draft
protocols publicized on August 31 revolve around three issues. The
most important is the planned creation of a Turkish-Armenian panel of
historians that will examine the mass killings and deportations of
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Critics allege that Ankara might
exploit the existence of such a body in order to dissuade other
countries from recognizing the massacres as genocide.

ARF leaders and other government opponents, such as the former Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian, also strongly object to another provision
that commits Armenia to explicitly recognizing its existing border
with Turkey. They say the clause is unacceptable because it precludes
future Armenian territorial claims to formerly Armenian-populated
areas in what is now eastern Turkey. They have also speculated that
Sargsyan may have pledged to make more concessions to Azerbaijan in
return for Ankara’s agreement to make no reference to the Karabakh
conflict in either protocol.

Sargsyan sought to address these concerns as he met with of 52 Armenian
parties mostly loyal to his administration on September 17. "I
also recognize the risks, and have concerns," he said, opening the
five-hour meeting behind closed doors. However, Sargsyan insisted
that his conciliatory tone in developing relations with Turkey is
worth this risk, since it shows that "a nation which endured the
cataclysm of genocide" is genuinely committed to making peace with its
longtime foe." He stressed that diplomatic relations between the two
neighboring states and an open border would only be the beginning of
a long reconciliation process (Statement by the Armenian presidential
press service, September 17).

Many participants in the discussion were reportedly unconvinced by
these arguments. "At one point, there was disappointment on Sargsyan’s
face," one unnamed party leader told the Yerevan newspaper Iravunk de
Facto. "Sargsyan looked like a different person after the meeting,"
claimed Aram Karapetian of the New Times Party, one of the opposition
parties that did not boycott the meeting (RFE/RL Armenia Report,
September 17).

According to Armen Rustamian, an ARF leader who represented the
nationalist party at the meeting, the president made clear that the
controversial protocols cannot be amended in any way prior to signing
the inter-governmental agreement. The ARF drafted and circulated
several amendments to the documents (stemming from its objections)
on September 15, as dozens of its activists staged a protest outside
the main government and foreign ministry buildings in Yerevan against
the government’s Turkish policy (Yerkir-Media TV, September 15).

Hrant Markarian, another Dashnak leader, told Radio Free Europe the
following day that Sargsyan might fall from power if he signs the
deal in its existing form. The warning seemed hollow, since unlike
the other opposition forces, the ARF is not demanding the Armenian
president’s resignation, despite its harsh criticism of his Turkish
policy. Moreover, the influential party known for its hard line on
Turkey holds only 16 seats y and is not in any position to block the
agreement. It can only rely on the backing of the opposition Heritage
party, which controls seven seats. The parliament’s pro-presidential
majority has already voiced its unconditional support for the
Turkish-Armenian agreements.

The Armenian National Congress (HAK), the country’s leading opposition
force not represented in the assembly, has adopted a surprisingly
subtle position on the matter. Jamestown witnessed the HAK’s leader,
Levon Ter-Petrosian addressing thousands of supporters in Yerevan on
September 18. He once again accused Sargsyan of being "fooled" by the
Turkish government last spring, but he stopped short of denouncing
the draft protocols. The former Armenian president stood by the HAK’s
September 1 statement, which described the protocols as a step forward,
while rejecting the planned Turkish-Armenian genocide study. "Who
needs this belated hysteria now that it is almost impossible to
influence the process?" he said, scoffing at the ARF uproar.

Ter-Petrosian himself championed better relations with Turkey,
for which he was vilified by the ARF and other nationalist groups
during his 1991-1998 presidency. His more cautious stance on the
latest developments in the Turkish-Armenian dialogue underscores
the changed fortunes of Sargsyan. The latter has remained defensive
over a Turkish-Armenian statement issued on the eve of the April
24 remembrance of the "genocide." The statement, which announced
a "roadmap" to normalizing bilateral ties, made it easier for
U.S. President Barack Obama to ignore his pre-election pledges to
describe the massacres as genocide. Many in Armenia and its worldwide
diaspora accused Sargsyan of willingly sacrificing U.S. recognition
of the Armenian genocide and gaining nothing in return.

The August 31 publication of the Turkish-Armenian agreements, which
set concrete time frames for the re-opening of the Turkish-Armenian
border without preconditions, can now be held up by Sargsyan as
a diplomatic success, even if Ankara stalls or bl liament. In the
latter case, Yerevan would be able to portray itself as the more
constructive party in the Western-backed dialogue and avoid making
any unpopular concessions resented by the Armenian opposition. Both
the United States and the European Union have stressed the importance
of a speedy implementation of these agreements.

Yerevan was unusually quick to criticize Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan for reportedly reiterating that Turkey will not lift
the 16-year economic sanctions on Armenia until agreeing to a Karabakh
settlement acceptable to Azerbaijan. In a late-night September 18
statement, Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian warned that
Erdogan risks wrecking both the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement and
the Karabakh peace process.

Madrid Principles And Armenian-Turkish Protocols Consequences Of Mar

MADRID PRINCIPLES AND ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS CONSEQUENCES OF MARCH 1 EVENTS?

Tert.am
25.09.2009

Armenia and Karabakh’s current state of affairs is not connected with
the dispersal of the rallies and the death of 10 people in downtown
Yerevan on March 1, 2008, said ARF-D MP Ruzan Arakelian, along with
Heritage Party MP Zaruhi Postanjian, during a press conference today.

According to Arakelian, ARF-D did everything that a political body
"concerned with the country" could do.

"I am not referring only to March 1 events; all this has very deep
roots," Postanjian said.

"A public, where they want slaves, where people have to be under
pressure and their rights violated, that comes out for rallies and
who is killed at the hands of armed forces, means that our state
and our leaders are not doing what they’re supposed to," Postanjian
said. In her opinion, it follows that neither are such leaders able
to protect their country’s interests on the foreign policy stage.

"That is why documents such as the Protocols and the Madrid Principles,
as well as Serzh Sargsyan’s latest interview to [Russian news program]
Vesti, are initiated," Postanjian said.

Postanjian also stated that one shouldn’t say that March 1 is not
connected with people’s freedoms.

"It is not connected with today’s topic," Arakelian corrected her
colleague, to which Postanjian responded by insisting that, in fact,
yes, it is directly connected with today’s topic.

Yerevan’s Tamanyan Park Is A Sculpture G

YEREVAN’S TAMANYAN PARK IS A SCULPTURE GARDEN

22-yerevan-s-tamanyan-park-is-a-sculpture-garden
T uesday September 22, 2009

Yerevan – Tamanyan Park, which spans the two city blocks leading to
Yerevan’s monumental Cascade, has been transformed into a sculpture
garden, an integral part of Cafesjian Center for the Arts.

Yerevan residents and visitors have noticed that Fernando Botero’s
Roman Warrior has been moved from another part of the center to the
sculpture park. Likewise, Lynn Chadwick’s Sitting Figures and Barry
Flanagan’s Hare on Bell have been relocated to the park.

Unobstructed walkways, long vistas, and formal garden areas are
elements of the design of Tamanyan Sculpture Park to provide a modern
setting for large-scale sculpture by internationally recognized
artists.

In an effort to connect the entire Yerevan community with art and
culture, Tamanyan Sculpture Park provides people with access to
contemporary art beyond the traditional museum experience.

"The quality of contemporary sculpture presented in Tamanyan Sculpture
Park is unparalleled," said Michael De Marsche, executive director of
the Cafesjian Center for the Arts. "I am sure this unique area will
be experienced and enjoyed by thousands of visitors each year as a
permanent addition to the city of Yerevan. There are few cities in
the world with a sculpture park of this quality," he added.

The grand opening of the Cafesjian Center for the Arts is scheduled
for November 2009, and construction at the Cascade is continuing in
anticipation of this event. The center will offer a wide variety
of exhibitions from Gerard L. Cafesjian’s private collection of
contemporary art. A diverse program of visiting lecturers, classic
films, musical concerts, and numerous educational programs will
augment the center’s vigorous exhibition schedule.

*** Barry Flanagan, 68, sculptor of hares

The British sculptor Barry Flanagan, whose work Hare on Bell is on
display at the Cafesjian Center for the Arts in Yerevan, died on August
31 in Ibiza, Spain. The New York Times wrote that he had "abandoned
the idiosyncratic arrangements of common materials that characterized
Postminimal sculpture to make sly if relatively traditional bronzes
of exuberant, loose-limbed hares."

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-09-