Displaying items by tag: housing

Monday, 20 August 2018 09:09

The Real Estate Market is on the Ropes

(New York)

The US real estate market is in a worrying period. New builds, home sales, and inventory have all been showing weak signs for the last few months, and it seems to portend the start of a reversal in the market after a long run higher. This week will see if the current downward trend holds, or whether the data was an aberration. New data this week will cover new and existing home sales, which the market will be watching closely for signs of a downturn.


FINSUM: Housing and building-related stocks have suffered this year on a worsening outlook. Our instinct is that housing has a hit a wall and may be at the start of a correction.

Published in Eq: Total Market

(New York)

The US commercial and residential real estate markets have been headed in opposite directions for a little while now, with the former looking weak and the latter looking strong. However, new data suggests that US residential real estate now looks headed for its worst downturn in years. The market is suffering from heavy prices and rising rates, which are constraining buyers. Those realities are now starting to play out in the data, as the latest US market info shows that existing home sales dropped in June (for the third straight month), new home purchases are at their slowest pace in eight months, and inventory is finally starting to increase. Annual price gains in May were also their slowest in almost a year and a half.


FINSUM: It is still early days to predict a big downturn, but these three data points are a big warning sign. We are especially paying attention to rising inventory, as really tight supply has been the hallmark of the market for at least five years.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Thursday, 19 July 2018 08:27

The US Housing Market Just Had a Big Stumble

(Atlanta)

All of the worries in the real estate market have been focused on commercial property. While commercial real estate is supposed to be overvalued and over-supplied (a dangerous combo), US residential real estate is supposed to be healthy, with manageable price rises and tight supply. However, the residential market has just gotten some bleak news. US Housing starts plunged by over 12% in June, and new building permits dropped over 2%. The reasons cited for the drop are a lack of skilled workers to build and a higher cost for materials.


FINSUM: The question is whether this is a demand-led problem (new buyers pulling away) or a supply-led one (meaning the supply of everything is too tight). The first would indicate falling prices, the second the opposite.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Friday, 25 May 2018 09:48

Real Estate Might Be in Trouble

(New York)

There have been some serious warnings about real estate from reputable sources lately, but not much data to support them. To this point, most fears have been centered around how rising rates might hurt the market, but none of that had emerged in the data, until now. A new US housing report has just showed that sales of existing US homes fell 2.5% in April. Low inventory and higher prices seem to be putting a dampening effect on buyers, says the Wall Street Journal.


FINSUM: This is a worrying stat for us, and its importance is elevated by the fact that the figure comes from April, which is part of the all-important spring home-buying season. The next few months of data will be very important.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Friday, 27 April 2018 03:45

Why US Housing Prices May Surge

(Atlanta)

There are a lot of investors worried about the US housing market at the moment. As rates rise, and a potential recession looms, some think housing could falter. On the flipside, however, it is often considered that home supply is low and demand is high, which has been pushing up prices and shows no signs of abating. Now, there is another factor to consider—US building materials prices are surging. Everything from lumber (up 16%) to insulation is jumping in price. Homebuilders say that despite the rise in costs, they have been able to offset the increases by hiking their prices, which they say consumers have been willing to pay.


FINSUM: The appetite for homes and new construction seems very strong at the moment, and certainly good enough to carry the market for a while yet.

Published in Eq: Total Market
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