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Is the Bell Tolling for Housing? The news that Toll Brothers' orders are down may seem to signal a bursting bubble. More likely the air is coming out slowly
USA (By Pete Coy, BusinessWeek)
February 7, 2006 —
Housing bears keep
searching for the one piece of news that will prove conclusively that the
housing market is crashing. They seemed to have it within their grasp on Feb. 7,
when homebuilder Toll Brothers announced that its orders fell 21% from a year
earlier in its first fiscal quarter, which ended Jan. 31. But on closer analysis, Toll Brothers' news isn't evidence of an abrupt tumble. Instead, it's more like another drop in a steady drip, drip, drip of negative news for housing. A slowdown in this market may still become a serious drag on U.S. economic growth, but the decline is likely to be gradual. Housing isn't likely to go poof like an over inflated balloon. What Bubble? People who own homebuilder
stocks — who, of course, naturally tend to be bullish on the sector — weren't
overly alarmed by Toll Brothers' report. The shares of the Horsham (Pa.)-based
homebuilder fell on the news but were down only about 5% in late trading,
falling by $1.71, to $29.49. Other major homebuilders, including D.R. Horton,
Lennar, and Pulte Homes, were down 2% to 4%. The truth is, even if Toll
Brothers is showing signs of fatigue, it may not be the best bellwether for
homebuilders. In a research note today, J.P. Morgan analyst Michael Rehaut
called Toll Brothers "the outlier in the group," saying it's the most exposed to
the Washington (D.C.) and New Jersey markets, which were once extremely strong
but have cooled. In addition, he said, Toll
Brothers' business has been so strong that it has had to put some customers off.
And not all are willing to wait. "We believe when expectations of home-price
appreciation are strong, buyers are willing to wait a year or more for their
homes," he said. "When their expectations are more modest, they are less willing
to commit so far in the future." At the same time, ownership
of equities hasn't budged. And while some of that increase can be explained by
the growth of the housing stock, at least 60% is a price change is unrelated to
fundamentals, Rosenberg says. |
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