From the NAHB:
Builder Confidence Slides In August
Reacting to what they perceive as increasing consumer uncertainty regarding the market for new single-family homes, builders tempered their views on current and expected sales activity in the Wells Fargo/National Association of Home Builders Housing Market Index (HMI) for August, released today. The HMI declined seven points to 32, its lowest level since February of 1991. This was the seventh consecutive month in which builder confidence, as measured by the index, has fallen.
“Two big factors are coloring builders’ perceptions of the market right now – rising sales cancellations and substantial growth in inventories of both new and existing homes,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. “These factors are largely the result of an increasing number of potential buyers adopting a ‘wait-and-see’ attitude because of uncertainty about where the housing market is headed, and record-high energy costs also appear to be weighing on housing demand. We’re also seeing an anticipated withdrawal of investors/speculators from the market, following a major influx in 2004-2005.”
…
All three component indexes declined in August. The component gauging current single-family home sales fell seven points to 36, while the component gauging sales expectations in the next six months and the component gauging traffic of prospective buyers both fell six points, to 40 and 21, respectively.Regionally, the HMI recorded a three-point decline to 34 in the Northeast, a five-point decline to 15 in the Midwest, a nine-point decline to 41 in the South and a 10-point decline to 42 in the West.
From Marketwatch:
Home builders’ confidence falls again in September
The confidence of U.S. home builders fell for the eighth straight month in September, dropping to the lowest level since February 1991, the National Association of Home Builders said Monday. The NAHB/Wells Fargo housing market index dropped by three points in September to 30 from a revised 33 in August, indicating that most builders think the housing market is poor. Economists expected the index to fall to 31. A year ago, the index was at 65. A reading of 50 would indicate builder sentiment was balanced between good and poor. (This is an update to correct how many months in a row the index has fallen.)
just follow jim cramer he says hb stocks have bottomed and it is time to buy buy buy
a year ago as HBer execs were onloading stock options they were saying the end was nowhere in sight.
Now……..a 180 degree turn.
Housing Crash in progress.
Go ahead and buy and be a bagholding losing fool.
This amounted to a three-point drop from an upwardly revised 33 reading in August, and is the lowest level the index has reached since February of 1991.”
Remember quite clearly the winter of 1993. It was dead. Notttting was moving. Nottting and no bids.
Realtors were harassing begging and starving. No attitude adjustment yet.Prices were decimated for condos. Second homes down the shore were absolutely crushed!
This recent mania is the biggest baddest one ever. So the hangover is going to be the biggest and baddest also.
DO NOT BUY A DEPRECIATING OVERPRICED HOUSE dummies. You will regret it.
Off-Topic – but “ooooooofffff!”
Amaranth Says Funds Lost 50% on Gas Trades This Month (Update3)
By Katherine Burton
Sept. 18 (Bloomberg) — Amaranth Advisors LLC, a hedge-fund manager with $9.5 billion in assets, warned investors that its two main funds fell almost 50 percent this month because of a plunge in natural-gas prices.
“We are in discussions with our prime brokers and other counterparties and are working to protect our investors while meeting the obligations of our creditors,” Nick Maounis, founder of the Greenwich, Connecticut-based firm, said in a letter to investors obtained by Bloomberg News. The funds, which had gained 26 percent through August, are down at least 35 percent for the year.
Amaranth, which made so-called spread trades that try to profit from price discrepancies among futures contracts, is at least the second hedge fund to be hurt by this year’s tumble in natural gas. Last month, MotherRock LP, a $400 million fund run by former New York Mercantile Exchange President Robert “Bo” Collins, went bust after natural-gas futures fell 68 percent from their Dec. 13 peak.
“To lose that much so fast, the traders involved didn’t have any stops” in place, said Robert Webb, a professor of finance at the University of Virginia and a former trader, referring to a type of trade designed to limit losses. “Sometimes spreads go awry.”
The Credit Blowup is in progress.
Meltdown…….the free phoney loans gone and so will speculator and builder demand….
PLUNGE!!!!!!!!
40% house price drops around the corner.
Came across that earlier CF, I thought the same thing..
Everyone, take some time and become more familiar with:
New Jersey Real Estate Report
It’s our new home.
jb
from Miller/Samuel’s Matrix Blog
(any responses from bulls welcome)
********************
32.6% of new mortgages and home equity loans in 2005 were interest only, up from 0.6% in 2000.
43% of first-time home buyers in 2005 put no money down.
15.2% of 2005 home buyers owe at least 10% more than their home is worth.
10% of all home owners have no equity in their homes.
$2.7 trillion in loans will adjust to higher rates in 2006 and 2007.
70% of borrowers who took out pay-option ARMS in the past year have loan balances larger than their initial loan.
Homeowners face higher payments as mortgages are reset. Generally, monthly payments rise between $200 and $500 depending on the size of the mortgage.
According to Reality Trac, August foreclosures were up 23% over July and 53% over a year ago.
The number of homes for sale is at record highs, and inventories are 59% higher than a year earlier.
New home sales are down 22% and existing home sales down 11%.
The NASB housing market index has recorded an all-time decline.
The housing affordability index is at a 15-year low.
The house price-to-income (rents) ratio is off the charts. According to HSBC, in 18 states accounting for over 40% of national home values, the price-to-income ratio is 3.6 standard deviations above the mean.
The OFHEO index of house prices deflated by the consumption price deflator has soared to a record high of 350 from 250 in 2001. From 1976 to 1996 it never was above 220.
According to the NAR the year-to year prices of existing homes are now flat. A short time ago they were rising at a yearly rate of 16%.
Nationally, home prices have not declined on a year-to-year basis since 1933. Recently, however, prices have been dropping in the North East, West and Mid-West.
Sales incentives are now estimated at 3% to 7% of selling prices.
“We are in discussions with our prime brokers and other counterparties and are working to protect our investors while meeting the obligations of our creditors,”
you see this…..you can appreciate how this filters through the system
prime brokerage = investment banks
did you see the movement of natural resources and precious metals? that was the hedge funds at work
just keep monitoring this stuff
note ….the funds were up 26% YTD through August and then in the last three weeks they have lost enough to be down 35% YTD. As they said, they lost 52% in September.
This can and will affect housing in the NYC-area if it happens on a larger scale……
Chi,
Follow up. However, small potatoes compared to Amaranth. If this keeps up, the housing market will not be the receipient of hedge fund bonus $.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=agThomYd4IPg&refer=home
Aeneas Capital Management LP, the hedge fund company run by former SAC Capital Advisors LLC money manager Thomas Grossman, is under investigation by regulators in the U.S. and Malaysia after bets on Malaysian stocks caused losses of about 60 percent in one of its funds, people familiar with the situation said.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is examining Aeneas to determine whether it broke any securities laws, three people with direct knowledge of the inquiry said. In Kuala Lumpur, Aeneas is being probed for potential stock manipulation, said the people, who declined to be identified because the investigations aren’t yet public.
Aeneas, which managed as much as $400 million and invested mostly in emerging markets, highlights the risks of funds that make concentrated bets and don’t have to make routine disclosures with regulators. More than 500 hedge funds have shut in the past two years, according to data compiled by Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. Altogether, they’ve caused less disruption to global markets than the collapse of Greenwich, Connecticut-based Long-Term Capital Management LP in 1998
BC Bob
Chi,
“did you see the movement of natural resources and precious metals? that was the hedge funds at work”
Don’t forget the central banks and the plunge protection team in Wash.. Great timing, right before the fed’s wed. meeting. Central banks have an uncanny ability to sell the PM’s at the low of a move.
We’ll see.
BC Bob
The dirt strts to come 0ut.
This is going to get mighty dirty!
http://www.hud.gov/oig/ig691014.pdf
Everyone, take some time and become more familiar with:
New Jersey Real Estate Report
It’s our new home.
Will you need to log in to comment or will there be many “anonymous” identities?
We’re going to use the forums for comments and discussion. There will be forums that allow anonymous replies, but most will require registration.
grim
232 users have already registered for the forums. The registration process is quick and easy.
jb
Cool!
CNN poll shows 70% of respondents predicting either that regional bubbles will burst or there will be a nationwide RE crash
Only 30% say soft landing or unsure.
Looks like the masses believe in the bubble
Looks like the masses believe in the bubble
That’s an argument against the bubble right there.
“That’s an argument against the bubble right there.”
the trend is your friend.
http://www.realtor.com/FindHome/HomeListing.asp?snum=4&locallnk=yes&frm=bymap&mnbed=0&mnbath=0&mnprice=600000&mxprice=99999999&js=off&pgnum=1&fid=so&stype=&mnsqft=&mls=xmls&areaid=27103&poe=realtor&ct=Iselin&st=NJ&sbint=&vtsort=&sorttype=&typ=1&x=35&y=12&sid=0747F6801013C&snumxlid=1055213859&lnksrc=00002
On the issue of new home construction, check out this ad. This is in Central Jersey, near the Metropark train station. This ad has been running for months.
This is a city block that had been vacant. Now they’re trying to build it up with 11 homes that are high-priced for the area.
I can’t imagine a more unattractive ad …including when you peer through the chain link fence and see the price on the billboard vs. the current asking price.