Hope for home builders still a mile away - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Hope for home builders still a mile away

Posted Feb 19 2008, 07:38 PM by Jon Markman
Rating:

The slimmest sliver of hopefulness crept into the gloomy residential construction industry today, as the National Association of Home Builders reported that its index of market confidence has edged higher this month by a single point, to 20. But when you consider that anything below 50 on the scale is considered lousy, it’s plain to see business is still a world of pain.

Home builders’ stocks rallied on the news, signifying that investors may believe some sort of bumpy bottom is now being set in place. Yet it is evident that this is the consensus view, and the consensus has been bitterly wrong about housing for the past two years. So if you want to be a contrarian today, you actually have to expect home prices and home-builders shares will commence to fall from their already low level.

At the risk of sounding like a spoil sport, I actually think that this is likely. To be bullish on home builders as an investor, after all, you need to make two assumptions (and both have to be right): You need to believe that home affordability will materially improve, and that the inventory of houses for sale will materially shrink.

The first assumption is probably correct: Affordability has improved by around 20% from levels in late 2006 due to the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest-rate cuts in the past two months. According to Morgan Stanley research, another 10% fall in home prices would take affordability back to the all-time high level set in October 1998.

It’s the other assumption that doesn’t work, because there’s a big difference between now and 1998: Back then, when the market did turn, there was only four months of home inventory on the market. Today there’s something like 9.6 months of inventory, according to Morgan Stanley data. That means interest rates have to fall much farther and housing starts have to contract a lot more to wipe out the inventory overhang and allow homebuilders to get traction as an industry again.

Today rates may be low but banks are increasingly unwilling to lend to all but the most rock-solid credits. As a result, investors should continue to be wary of homebuilders shares no matter how tempting they may look now. It may be cheap to get in a new house in Indianapolis, Ind., or Youngstown, Ohio, but just about anywhere else, like Los Angeles or Phoenix, you're out of luck.

And how about the mortgage banks such as Fannie Mae (FNM), with rates falling? Steer clear of them too, since the credit quality of Fannie's securitized loans is deteriorating amid rising delinquency rates. The scariest thing about Fannie is that even its jumbo-loan customers labeled as “prime” credits are bailing on obligations at an accelerating rate, according to the latest data, which can only lead in one direction: More losses for lenders.

Comments

 

kevin b... I agree with 100%...everytime I see DOOM & GLOOM..I know Jon is the author....He is "the sky is falling" and  a very negative force with his rhetoric...   Just remember that what is down has to go back up!  Hopefully with more intelligent restraint!

I am scared to death to buy a house now!

Mike Land you need to understand what you are talking about before you pop your mouth off at the home builders.  Cracks?  You never heard of a house settling?  Get real.  Home building is in a depression and we are trying to make it through.  Do you realize how many people are affected by this house slump?  Guess not because you would not have made such a disparaging remark.  We have built America brick by brick, board by board to make it the best country in the world.  Dont let a few dishonest people cloud your judgement of the thousands of hard working men and women who give us shelter.

To some extent, I agree with Mike Land, some of the bigger home builders do build crap and the consumer feel right into it with the lower price and higher square footage.  Unfortunately, those builders will still be around when the building market shakes out.  It is the small builder who builds a product with quality and integrety and the goal to build the best home for the consumer that concern me, they do not make a large profit because they have to compete with the mass builder.  The consumer who bought a home with problems did not look at the structure, only the price and the "eye candy" that has nothing to do with quality.

steve...I hope that you are willing to pay more than top dollars. and china and the rest of the other countrys air lines buy only domestic airplanes...!this is a global market!......demand good quality!!....where it came from is erelevant. we are making GOOD money o/s . we just have to WORK HARDER thats all

Jon and other so called "experts" don't seem to realize that interest rates aren't the problem or that cutting them will not solve the problem.  The real problem is that middle-class Americans are not earning enough money to keep the economy rolling.  Adjusted for inflation, the average American worker is making the same money now (approximately $16/hr) as they did in 1973. The cost of homes, cars, health care, groceries, and gas is obviously much higher now than it was in 1973!  As long as corporations are allowed to outsource manufacturing and other good jobs overseas, the overall economy will continue to worsen as consumers with poor-paying service jobs can't afford to buy the services that a service oriented economy has, which is what the US economy is becoming.

Mike Land you must be a miserable person. To wish for people like myself to fail is really low. Obviously you have never succeeded in anything in your life. You probably want and certainly need the govt. to provide for you. Its people like yourself and Jon that make this situation even worse.

I still think that David Rosenberg at ML had it right... the NAHB HMI leads the S&P500 by 12-15 months, and even if the HMI is signalling a bottom, the S&P500 still has a LONG way to correct. Here's my latest graph with the Feb2008 HMI value of 20 included. Note that I use Yahoo Finance price data for the S&P500 Index (^GSPC) multiplied by 0.052 in order to get both graphs on the same y-axis scale: i30.tinypic.com/2nbh62p.gif

Alot of valid points. However, Kevin B has no clue. Being a RE broker in socal for the past 15 yrs., I can tell you that valuations are just starting to off the cliff. Particularly the jumbo & upper tier of the res. sfr mkt. All those people w/ adj. arms will not be able to refi no matter how good their credit. Since no more jumbo stated income paper is being offered, potential refi & purchase applicants would have to produce 2-3 yrs worth of verifiable income documentation. That's not going to happen. A startling number of the buyers who jumped in a few yrs. back did so on stated income loans. Combine this fact with declining values and you have the making of the "perfect storm". For the small number of A paper borrowers who could qualify going full doc., why would they when values are falling by the day ? There are thousands of homeowners who would be required to bring in $ 10,000's of dollars to escrow just to drop their interest rate on a refi. And why would anyone purchase, knowing full well that every penny they put into their home would evaporate faster than they could write the mortgage checks ? Sorry to say, but this elevator is going down and we've only come down about 10 stories on a 100 story building. Save your pennies and wait about 2-3 years.

Im remodeling right now. I live near the beach in Los Angeles. The marina del rey area. Do you guys think this is dumb?

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):