A Big Homebuilder Stock Price Reset Is Likely Coming: How to Trade It

 | Oct 04, 2023 02:38AM ET

Housing market update – The highest mortgage rates in 20 years, the worst level of affordability since 1984 and increasingly tight household finances are starting to torpedo housing market activity.

After rising slightly in three of the previous five weeks, (from 142 to 147) the mortgage purchase applications index fell from 147 to 144 last week. I suspect that it will fall more this week, as the 10-year yield has risen inexorably from 3.35% in May to 4.60%, and from 4.38% to 4.60% just this past week alone. The base 30-year fixed rate mortgage has jumped to 7.5% (20% down, 740+ FICO), which means housing purchase affordability continues to get worse.

New home sales in August fell 8.7% from July vs the consensus expectation of a 2.2% decline, while July’s 4.4% increase over June was revised higher to 8%. I suspect the numbers for both July and August as estimated by the Census Bureau are wildly inaccurate. At the 90% level of statistical confidence, the August number could vary from +6.9% to -24.3%.

Why even bother putting together the data series? The months’ supply of new homes according to the Census Bureau is now at 8 months. I thought the propagandists’ narrative was that there’s a shortage of new home supply?

Recall that new home “sales” are based on contracts signed. As mentioned last week, 15.7% of all home purchase contracts signed in August were canceled at the highest rate in 20 years. Based on the weekly trend in mortgage purchase contracts in July and August, and given the cancellation rate in August, I’d say it’s more likely that the 8% increase in new home contracts in July was lower than calculated by the Census Bureau, while the 8.7% decline was more severe than the CB calculus shows.

As more housing data from July and August is released, it looks like my view that home sales hit a wall in July and August may be correct. Existing and pending home sales have declined to near-historic annualized lows. New home sales took off in January primarily because of the low inventory of existing home sale listings. In addition, homebuilders began to offer steep discounts to the list price along with other incentives.

Then in 2023 the rate buydown became all the rage, which enabled homebuilders to prevent sales from declining. But the incentives discounts have hammered profitability, as I have detailed in the recent earnings reports of DHI, LEN and KBH. It’s going to get worse, especially with the 10-year Treasury rate relentlessly grinding higher.

Pending home sales for August plunged 7.1% from July and 18.7% YoY. The decline hit all four regions (west, northeast, midwest, and southeast), with the southeast down 9.1%. The southeast had been the hottest region during the inflation of the bubble. The pending home sales index is down to the lowest reading during the pandemic lockdown, which is the lowest index level on record.

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