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Builders Brace for a Housing Downturn
Even this typically sunny sector is expecting
prices to fall as prelude to a prolonged downturn
NEW YORK CITY
(By Peter Coy, Business Week) September 8, 2006 The housing market is looking
sicker by the day. On Sept. 7, the perpetually optimistic National Association
of Realtors acknowledged for the first time that housing prices are likely to
fall on a year-over-year basis, at least for a time.
Beazer Homes USA and KB Home lowered their earnings guidance. Federal Reserve
Bank of San Francisco President Janet Yellen is warning that a housing slowdown
will weaken consumer spending, which is 70% of the economy. And economists
issued new forecasts showing that a slowdown in housing could reduce growth to
barely above recession levels. All that came one day after Hovnanian Enterprises
announced a 35% decline in earnings per fully diluted share for its latest
fiscal quarter.
Overshadowed by all the bad news was a tidbit that once would have been seen as
a big positive for housing: mortgage rates remain quite reasonable. Freddie Mac
said Sept. 7 that the national average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage was
6.47% in the latest week. That's down from 6.72% as recently as late July.
Mountain
Football
Mortgage rates.
No one's paying attention to the cost of borrowing money these days because it
seems trivial next to the risk of losing money by buying high and selling
lowcatching a falling knife, in the Wall Street vernacular.
Ian Shepherdson of High Frequency Economics, an early bear on housing, said in a
conference call with clients on Sept. 7 that the housing market is so far gone
that "it's not rescuable anymore. The housing market is beyond the control of
the Fed." He compared it to a football game played on a mountaintop. Once the
football goes off the edge, he said, it doesn't stop until it reaches the very
bottom.
Even the homebuilders, long an optimistic bunch, are all but throwing in the
towel on the current market's condition. "We're running our business today as if
we're in a prolonged downturn," CEO Ara Hovnanian of Hovnanian Enterprises told
analysts Sept. 6.
GDP Bite
In boom times,
when home prices were rising 16% a year and many buyers expected that pattern to
continue, they could borrow at 6% and, in effect, be paid 10% a year for living
in their homes. Now that annual appreciation is roughly 0% and interest rates
are roughly the same, says Shepherdson, the real cost of living in a house has
increased enormously.
Shepherdson says that housing alone could take 2 percentage points off GDP
growth, lowering it to 1.5% from 3.5%. Add in weakness in other sectors, such as
autos, and actual GDP growth could briefly dip to zero next year, Shepherdson
adds.
"The housing market party is over," economic forecaster Global Insight said
Sept. 7. While not as bearish as High Frequency, it's predicting that housing
starts will fall 10% this year and 13% in 2007. It predicted that second-half
2006 growth will average just above 2%, with housing being the main negative.
Lowered Horizons
The National
Association of Realtors has been reliably upbeat on the market for months, but
on Sept. 7, Chief Economist David Lereah said, "We'll probably see prices dip
temporarily below year-ago levels as the market works through a build up in
housing inventory." He predicted that the national median existing-home price
for all housing types will grow 2.8% in 2006 over 2005, and the median new-home
price will rise 0.2%. He predicted a 7.6% decline in the volume of new home
sales.
No wonder builders are lowering their forecasts. Atlanta-based Beazer lowered
its forecast for fiscal 2006 diluted earnings per share to $8 to $8.50, from
$9.25 to $9.75. It said net sales through the two months ended Aug. 31 were 49%
below a year earlier, and cancellations of existing contracts rose to 50% from
26% a year earlier. Los Angeles-based KB Home also lowered earnings guidance as
it said that preliminary net orders for the third quarter were down 43% from the
year-earlier quarter.
Red Bank (N.J.)-based Hovnanian, remarkably, maintained its earnings guidance
for its full fiscal year in spite of a worse-than-expected quarterly
performance. The company said it expects for the fiscal year ending Oct. 31 to
earn between $5 and $5.75 per fully diluted common share, compared to fiscal
2005 earnings of $7.16 per fully diluted common share.
"Inexorable
Process"
One piece of
mildly good news, in Hovnanian's view, is that it believes the rate of
cancellation of orders from homes has stopped increasing, at least for now. The
cancellation rate was 33% for its third quarter, which was up significantly from
24% a year earlier but barely higher than the 32% rate in the second quarter.
But even Hovnanian is being cautious. For example, the company is cutting back
on the amount of land it controls when it can't renegotiate deals at favorable
terms.
High Frequency Economics' Shepherdson argues that housing could remain weak for
another two or three years. "This," says Shepherdson, "is pretty much an
inexorable process."
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