| Like
a mirage in the
desert, the bottom
of the housing
slump seems to
fade in and out of
sight as the year
progresses. Home
sales jump, and
there—you think
you can make it
out in the
distance. Home
sales fall, and
it's lost in the
haze.
"There's a
lot of competition
trying to figure
out when things
are going to
bottom," says
Morningstar
analyst Eric
Landry. "But
it's unlikely that
you're going to
figure that out
before any one
else does."
In the last
week of June, at
the very end of
what are
traditionally the
strongest three
months for home
sales, we learned
that both
existing- and
new-home sales
remained sluggish
in May. On June
25, the National
Association of
Realtors said the
rate of
existing-home
sales slipped 0.3%
in May, to an
annual pace of
5.99 million
units, while
supply climbed to
8.7 months, the
highest reading
since June, 1992.
The next day, the
U.S. Census Bureau
said sales of new
single-family
homes fell 1.6% in
May, to a
seasonally-adjusted
annual rate of
915,000 units.
New-home supply
edged up to 7.1
months from 7
months in April.
Price Cuts
Aren't Cutting It
The May home
sales news,
combined with
homebuilder
Lennar's
weaker-than-expected
earnings
announcement on
May 26, dashed any
remaining hopes of
an imminent end to
troubles in the
housing market.
Spirits had been
higher in April,
when sales of new
homes jumped 13%,
as builders
whittled away at
huge inventories
with aggressive
pricing. The
median price of a
new home dropped
11% in April from
the previous
month, to
$229,100, the
biggest decline
since 1970.
But for
homebuilders,
price cuts just
aren't cutting it
anymore. Lennar,
the second-biggest
builder in the
country, reported
a second-quarter
loss of $1.55 per
share, down from a
profit of $2 one
year ago, and much
lower than
analysts' forecast
of a
5-cent-per-share
profit. The Miami
builder said lower
prices helped move
inventory, but
backfired on
profit margins.
"As we look
to our third
quarter and the
remainder of 2007,
we continue to see
weak, and perhaps
deteriorating,
market
conditions,"
Chief Executive
Stuart Miller said
in a statement.
Landry still
likes the troubled
builder. "It
was a very, very,
very bad quarter
for Lennar,"
he says. "But
there are a lot of
things happening
below the surface
that longer-term
investors will
appreciate."
Lennar has taken
the steps to
prepare itself for
a housing
correction by
maintaining a
strong balance
sheet and cutting
land inventory
before other
builders, Landry
notes. And at its
current price,
it's a good deal,
he says, and it's
well-positioned to
make a comeback
after the market
picks up.
Buyers on the
Sidelines
Of course
investors are
still wondering
when that might
happen.
"Write it
off: '07 is going
to be a bad
year," Landry
says. "It
[the housing
bottom] could be a
2008 event, it
could be a 2009
event." To
make matters even
more confusing, it
may be difficult
to draw any strong
conclusion from
May home-sales
data, given the
very small
month-over-month
declines. This is
especially true
for new-home
sales, which have
a margin of error
of 10.8%.
"The housing
market data,
especially
new-home sales, is
historically
extremely
volatile, "
says Wachovia
analyst Adam York.
"If you get a
lot of sales one
month, there's an
extremely good
chance you won't
get as many the
next month."
As mortgage
rates creep up,
subprime problems
proliferate, and
buyers stay on the
sidelines, the
outlook for
housing is bound
to become more and
more uncertain. In
addition to
new-home sales,
housing starts
increased in
April, and both
declined in May.
"Perhaps
people had been
hoping that the
bottom had come
and gone last
month," says
York. "We're
still pretty much
saying that the
bottom is going to
be this year, but
we may not have
seen it yet."
|