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MORE
ON THE NUMBERS
• Existing-Home
Sales – National
Association of Realtors5; Briefing.com |
Housing Chill
Grows Worse,
Bites Consumers
By
SUDEEP REDDY and MICHAEL CORKERY
September 26, 2007; Page A1
The
housing market is going into a deeper chill, and consumers are starting to
shiver.
Sales of
existing homes in August fell sharply, and home inventories by one measure
soared to an 18-year high, according to data released yesterday. One major home
builder, D.R. Horton Inc., is auctioning homes this weekend with
starting prices for some units at 50% off an earlier price.
The housing market is worrying
consumers, raising fresh concerns about economic growth. Consumer confidence
fell this month to its lowest level in almost two years, a new survey showed.
Retailers such as Lowe's Cos. and Target Corp. said they're
feeling the pain. Both reported softer-than-expected sales Monday.
"The
combination of all this is indicative of an economy that has lost quite a bit
of momentum," said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at the consulting
firm MFR Inc., an economic forecasting firm that advises investors.
Wall
Street seems unconcerned for now. Broad stock indexes moved little yesterday,
and the Dow Jones Industrial Average is just a few hundred points from its
all-time high.
Optimists
believe the Federal Reserve's aggressive move last week to cut interest rates
will help keep the economy out of recession. Also, exports are rising, thanks
to a weaker dollar, and business investment is holding up.
Still,
the pace of housing's downturn is accelerating, surprising even some bearish
analysts.
Lennar Corp., the nation's
second-largest home builder by market value, reported a net loss of $514
million for the quarter ended Aug. 31. That was nearly six times the loss Wall
Street analysts on average had expected, and compared with net income of $207
million a year earlier. The company was forced to write down the value of land
and write off deposits for land it no longer wants to build on. The writedowns
totaled $847.5 million in the quarter. Lennar said it has cut its work force by
35% since last year.
REAL
TIME ECONOMICS
• Read more about the decline in home
prices at WSJ.com's Real Time Economics blog.2
Lennar
shares fell 4% and have lost more than half their value this year.
Chief
Executive Stuart Miller said the problems are broad-based and stem from an
oversupply of homes, turmoil in the mortgage market and weak consumer
confidence. "We have not only not seen evidence of any of these items
resolving, but instead we have seen further deterioration," Mr. Miller
told investors and analysts during a conference call.
Overall, sales of existing homes
tumbled 4.3% in August to an annual pace of 5.5 million, the slowest in five
years, the National Association of Realtors said yesterday. More worrisome: The
number of homes for sale is enough to satisfy 10 months of demand at the
current pace. Two years ago the figure was below five months. Analysts cite
excess supply in forecasting that an upturn in sales and prices may not come
until 2009.
Home prices in July fell 3.9% from a year
earlier, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index. The index,
which tracks prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas, hadn't measured that big of
a decline since just after the 1990-91 recession.
The bottom is "not yet in
sight" for housing, said Mr. Shapiro, the economist. He said the growing
number of unsold homes "argues for accelerating declines of prices."
The worsening
housing slump and turmoil in the credit markets is beginning to take a toll on
retailers. Lowe's Chief Executive Robert Niblock, addressing analysts and
investors at a conference in Charlotte, N.C., yesterday, refused to hazard a
guess on when the housing slowdown will bottom. "The only thing that is consistent is the
inaccuracies of the economic forecasts," he said. Late Monday,
Lowe's reduced its earnings outlook for this year and 2008. Its shares fell
6.7% yesterday.
Other
well-regarded retailers are missing forecasts. Target on Monday lowered its
estimate for September sales. In August, Costco Wholesale Corp.'s sales
at stores open at least a year rose just 1%, much lower than its original
forecast. It cited weakness in California, which has been hard-hit by the
housing slowdown. Target mentioned soft sales in the Northeast and Florida.
The
Conference Board said yesterday that its index of consumer confidence dropped
to 99.8 in September from 105.6 in August, putting it at the lowest point since
November 2005. The survey ended on Sept. 18, the day the Fed lowered interest
rates by half a percentage point. The share of consumers reporting jobs as
"hard to get" rose to 22.1% from 19.7%.
"Looking
ahead, little economic improvement is expected," said Lynn Franco, who
directs the Conference Board survey.
Builders
are divided on how drastically to cut prices to put a dent in supply. Earlier
this month, Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. held a 72-hour weekend sale
nationwide, dubbed "The Deal of the Century," and offered discounts
of up to 30% on certain homes. The company sold 2,100 homes during the promotion, about 10 times the
usual weekly number. Hovnanian executives said that demonstrates buyers will
come if the price is right.
On
Saturday, D.R. Horton is using an auction to sell 53 homes in San Diego. The
starting bid for some units will be as much as 50% lower than previous prices,
according to the auction Web site. On a one-bedroom unit, the starting bid is
$149,000, down from a previous price of $309,990.
Lennar's
Mr. Miller questioned the wisdom of deep discounts, saying he's not willing to
match some of the incentives offered by competitors. He said some recent price
cuts were "just unrealistic and maybe even ridiculous."
Lennar's average home price
nationally declined 6% in the third quarter to $296,000 from $316,000 from a
year ago. Its average incentive per home -- a figure that includes extra
amenities and price discounts -- increased to $46,000 from $36,000 a year ago.
Individual home owners have been slower
than builders to bring down their prices to match demand, but that may be
changing as the housing slump worsens. "The existing-home market is moving
much more rapidly to adjust downward," Mr. Miller said.
The
National Association of Realtors reported yesterday that the median national
home price was $224,500 in August, up 0.2% from $224,000 in August 2006. Those
numbers can be skewed by the mix of homes sold in a particular month.
Economists say the Case-Shiller index is less vulnerable to that distortion
because it tracks the sales of individual homes over time.
Mortgage
companies are scaling back loans to people who have poor credit or can't
document their income, while looking to make more loans that can be insured by
the Federal Housing Administration.
That trend showed up in Lennar's
figures. In the third quarter, 25% of buyers using Lennar's in-house mortgage
company used an "Alt-A" mortgage, a category between prime and
subprime that often requires little documentation, down from 41% a year earlier.
The proportion of FHA-insured loans rose to 25% from 12%.
"The
days of no verification, no down payment and low credit scores are past,"
said Lennar's chief financial officer, Bruce Gross.
--Ann
Zimmerman contributed to this article.
Write to Sudeep Reddy at sudeep.reddy@wsj.com3 and
Michael Corkery at michael.corkery@wsj.com4
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