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  • Home builders turn bullish for the first time in nearly a year amid strong housing demand

    Home builders turn bullish for the first time in nearly a year amid strong housing demand

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    The numbers: For the first time in nearly a year, home builders are upbeat about the housing market outlook.

    The shortage of previously-owned sales is helping to buoy builders’ confidence. 

    With mortgage rates above 6%, many homeowners find little incentive to sell—nearly 92% have an outstanding mortgage with a rate below 6%, according to a recent survey conducted by Redfin
    RDFN,
    -0.37%
    ,
    a brokerage and real estate listings company. And 23.5% of homeowners have a mortgage rate of less than 3%. Consequently, the number of new home listings has dropped by 22%, as compared with the same period a year ago, according to a Realtor.com housing trends report.

    In turn, home builders are feeling good about their business. The National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) monthly confidence index rose 5 points to 55 in June, the trade group said Monday.

    This is the sixth month in a row that sentiment has improved among builders. It is also the first time in 11 months that builder confidence has moved into positive territory of above 50.

    The June reading of 55 was the strongest since July 2022. A year ago, the index stood at 67.

    Key details: Builders were starting to pull back on sales incentives. The share of builders cutting prices to boost sales has dropped to 25% in June, from a peak of 36% in November 2022.

    The typical builder was cutting prices by 7% in June, the NAHB said.

    The three gauges that underpin the overall builder-confidence index were up.

    • A reading on current sales conditions rose by 5 points. 

    • A measure on future sales gained 6 points.

    • A gauge of traffic of prospective buyers rose by 4 points. 

    Big picture: Due to pandemic-era monetary policies that depressed mortgage rates, the home buyers, real-estate agents, mortgage brokers and the rest of the industry are stuck trying to find solutions to a major supply crunch of homes.

    Builders seem to be one of the few participants who have benefited from the supply crunch, given the nature of their business of new construction. The homebuilder ETF,
    XHB,
    -0.38%
    ,
    is up 25% year-to-date. 

    What the NAHB said: “A bottom is forming for single-family home building as builder sentiment continues to gradually rise from the beginning of the year,” Robert Dietz, chief economist at the NAHB, wrote.

    And with the “Federal Reserve nearing the end of its tightening cycle,” the statement read, it’s “good news for future market conditions in terms of mortgage rates and the cost of financing for builder and developer loans.”

    Markets were closed on Monday in observance of the Juneteenth holiday.

    Realtor.com is operated by News Corp subsidiary Move Inc., and MarketWatch is a unit of Dow Jones, also a subsidiary of News Corp.

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  • Home builders sentiment index falls for record tenth month in a row in October. Home builders say the ‘situation is unhealthy and unsustainable.’

    Home builders sentiment index falls for record tenth month in a row in October. Home builders say the ‘situation is unhealthy and unsustainable.’

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    The numbers:  The National Association of Home Builders’ (NAHB) monthly confidence fell 8 points to 38 in October, the trade group said on Tuesday.

    It’s the tenth month in a row that the index has fallen.

    Outside of the pandemic, the October reading of 38 is the lowest level since August 2012.

    A year ago, the index stood at 80.

    The index’s ten-month drop is a new record. The index last fell for 8 months straight in 2006 and 2007.

    Key details: All three gauges that underpin the overall builder-confidence index fell.

    • The gauge that marks current sales conditions fell by 9 points. 

    • The component that assesses sales expectations for the next six months fell by 11 points.

    • And the gauge that measures traffic of prospective buyers fell by 6 points.

    All four NAHB regions posted a drop in builder confidence, led by the south and the west. 

    It’s also likely that this year will be the first time since 2011 that single-family starts see a decline, the NAHB added.

    Big picture: Builders continue to struggle to find buyers with the current rate environment.

    Now they’re saying they’re worried about that depressed demand impacting supply moving forward.

    Specifically, they’re concerned about housing affordability worsening, with potentially fewer new homes being built in the future.

    Mortgage rates have doubled from last year, now exceeding 7%, which has considerably cooled buyer demand. 

    Home price growth is moderating, but prices have not come down substantially — yet. 

    The median sales price for a new home was $436,800 in August, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    What the NAHB said: Builders are expecting single-family starts to fall for the first time in 11 years — and expect additional declines through 2023, said NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz, due to the Federal Reserve’s projected rate hikes to control inflation.

    While some analysts have suggested that the housing market is now more ‘balanced,’ the truth is that the homeownership rate will decline in the quarters ahead as higher interest rates, and ongoing elevated construction costs continue to price out a large number of prospective buyers,” he added.

    “This situation is unhealthy and unsustainable,” Jerry Konter, a home builder and developer from Savannah, Ga. and the NAHB’s chairman, said in a statement.
    “Policymakers must address this worsening housing affordability crisis,” he added.

    What are they saying? “The housing sector – sentiment, building activity and sales – is collapsing under the weight of a rapid increase in interest rates and elevated prices, which are crimping affordability and demand,” Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote in a note.

    So expect building activity to be depressed, she added.

    Market reaction: The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.989%

    fell to 3.98% on Tuesday morning.

    While the SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF
    XHB,
    +2.15%

    traded slightly higher during the morning session, and the big home-builder stocks, from D.R. Horton Inc.
    DHI,
    +2.90%

    to Toll Brothers
    TOL,
    +1.87%

    to Lennar
    LEN,
    +2.97%
    ,
    edged higher.

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