June 09, 2006

AG Edwards: "If it is not already painfully apparent, the soft-landing thesis for the homebuilding industry is dead"


Yup, there was a ton of money to be made shorting the builders. Hope The Banker found a new job. Pretty nice timing by those Toll Brothers brothers selling at the top last fall, eh? Thanks B.P. for the link

Builders Crumble Under Pressure

The second quarter is proving to be troublesome for homebuilders. They have been cutting their full-year earnings projections in droves as orders look weak and cancellation rates rise.

The latest salvo came Monday after Standard Pacific and Technical Olympic announced weak order numbers, sending builder shares lower across the board. The selloff suggests that investors are having trouble seeing a bottom for the group and would rather not buy into a sector that may represent a value trap.

"If it is not already painfully apparent, the soft-landing thesis for the homebuilding industry is dead," wrote A.G. Edwards analyst Greg Gieber in a research note in which in he cut Standard Pacific from buy to hold.

Standard Pacific said new orders in April and May fell 41%, largely because of increased cancellation rates and continued softening of demand in markets such as California, Florida and Arizona. Because of the disappointing orders, Standard Pacific said it expects to lower its earnings guidance for the year when it reports second-quarter numbers in late July.

One hedge fund manager, who plays the sector long and short, said that Monday's selloff could point to a worse-than-expected downside scenario for builder stocks, where the news gets bad at a very fast pace, rather than a slow shakeout over an extended time frame.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

most have dropped 50% or more already - the question now is will they go bankrupt, or will some get bought?

Anonymous said...

I dont want it. It's crap

Anonymous said...

The smallest builders are likely to fold, most of them being private companies. I think most of the publicly traded companies will find a way to hang around. Many of them hold a substantial amount of land, and many of them are likely to merge before the housing collapse fully plays itself out.

Anonymous said...

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