Examining the home price boom and its effect on owners, lenders, regulators, realtors and the economy as a whole.
Wednesday, January 25, 2006
Discounts Offered To Combat Cancellations: CTX
Market Watch has this report on Centex. "There's no question demand is slowing in certain markets, such as Phoenix and Washington, D.C., Centex executives said. Cancellations ticked up 175 basis points to 27.2% in the fiscal third quarter ended Dec. 31. But Eller said this still falls within the company's historic cancellation rate average of 20% to 30%. The biggest cancellation increases came in Phoenix, Indianapolis, Minnesota, San Diego, Sacramento, Calif., and Reno, Nev."
"To combat this, the company has started offering incentives and discounts, such as special 12-hour 'blowout' sales, to drive traffic and sales at some communities. Chief Financial Officer Lel Echols emphasized the discounting sales were held in markets that had seen 'heavy runups in prices in the last year,' where the discounts simply brought prices back to levels they were at six months ago. "
"Chairman and CEO Tim Eller said the company's wide geographical footprint should allow Centex to offset weaknesses in some markets with strength in others. 'For example, frothy markets such as Phoenix and Washington, D.C. are moderating, but our operations in the Carolinas and Texas are accelerating,' Eller said. 'Right now, our Sacramento and San Diego operations are also moderating while our five other California markets continue to be strong.'"
"Orders, which reflect revenue two or three quarters down the line when a home sale closes, rose only 4% in the quarter. Several regions experienced year-over-year declines: The Mid-Atlantic, Southeast and Midwest saw orders fall 8%, 15% and 3%, respectively. This was partly offset by order increases in the Southwest and West Coast, where orders climbed 28% and 10%, respectively."
"Echols sees the slowdown in Washington as a temporary phenemona that will likely rebound within a few quarters. 'The speculators, let's call it the flipper-speculators, are exiting the (Washington) market and putting inventory on the market, and that inventory is being worked through through the normal sales process,' said Echols."
"Centex has been aggressively buying back stock, having repurchased 5% of the company's shares outstanding in the past four months. Eller said the company expects to continue repurchasing shares."
Update: From Marketwatch. "'Speculators are pulling out,' said David Lereah. 'I expect further softening in prices,' Lereah said."
The flippers are hating this! I'm sure they're still in denial and will hold out for higher prices! LOL!
ReplyDeleteHey, Ben. Totally OT but I don't know how you contact you privately.
ReplyDeleteDo you think this is overpriced? I'm thinking about it
http://phoenix.craigslist.org/apa/125898321.html
txchic57,
ReplyDeleteI have an email for the blogs:
thehousingbubble@gmail.com
Also, here is an auction site that includes Phoenix.
txchic57,
ReplyDeleteI know you want Ben's opinion, but I can't help but chime in...I'm very familiar w/ Phx area...that's a pretty good area, although traffic on I-10 around that exit is brutal in rush hour...so depending on your commute (if any), you may want to consider that....the price seems about right, a little high, but place looks cool and it's not overpriced...and the hiking on South Mountain is a plus. There is plenty of grocery/shopping/services in that area as well.
JMHO!
When a company buys back stock that means the monies spent is the very best investment for the company.
ReplyDeleteSo to purchase more land and build more houses is not a good investment at this time.
Thanks, Catherine. That's what I thought too and I have bargained the rent down almost 20%.
ReplyDeleteGee, so the big Fusion project a few blocks away from me, where they plan to pack people like sardines into 280 units, is just booming. How depressing.
ReplyDeleteWhat's even more depressing is if those units all get sold and occupied. Aviation Boulevard is already a traffic nightmare.
My housing market has shown very little weakness so far, we'll see what spring brings. I wonder how long the price range $509s-$700s will last.
South Bay Beaches Housing Bubble
Beartopia
Here's a nice graph of existing home sales.
ReplyDeleteBen,
ReplyDeleteAs much as I like those terrible looking off-the-edge-of-the-cliff graphs. Whoever plotted it cherry picked the X axis values to emphasize the recent drop off, a common trick to make the situation look much worse than it actually is..
...Except when it isn't.
grim
grim,
ReplyDeleteI have no idea about that, but these are the same graphs they update every month. One of a dozen.
bearmaster, how do you know the fusion complex is selling well? I live in the same area as you, and while there aren't a lot of signs that the bubble is bursting, I have noticed that a lot of houses for sale in the fall never sold and were just taken off the market.
ReplyDeleteRegarding bonds: since the Fed is re-introducing 30 yr bonds, won't demand for 10 yr bonds become less? Also we must assume foreign central banks will continue to buy bonds to keep demand high. Haven't countries like Russia and China hinted they will diversify (less USD holdings)?
ReplyDeleteI need to know the arguments against these factors besides historical presidence.