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Is housing out of the woods?
WASHINGTON -- Oct. 24, 2006 -- Depending on whom
you ask, the winds may already be shifting for the housing market. All year,
economists have warned of a bursting housing bubble and its potential impact on
economic growth. However, a recent stream of encouraging data has some prominent
prognosticators changing their tune.
One of the first in
line was Alan Greenspan. As recently as May 18, the former Federal Reserve
chairman put an exclamation point on the housing slowdown when he declared, "The
boom is over." But now, the "worst may well be over," Greenspan was quoted as
saying Oct. 7, after mortgage applications posted their biggest weekly gain since
June 2005.
A growing number of
economists and analysts have come around to the ex-Fed chief's view. Some
investors may see sunnier skies too, as homebuilding stocks such as Lennar (LEN),
DR Horton (DHI), and Pulte Homes (PHM) have rebounded since touching 52-week lows
in July. Reports on existing home sales for September, scheduled for release Oct.
25, and new home sales Oct. 26 could shed more light on housing's status.
Leveling out?
While the most
bearish scenarios may be becoming increasingly unlikely, the housing market
probably isn't out of the woods yet. Even the most upbeat forecasts call for
new-home construction to keep declining nearly as much as it already has so far.
Meanwhile, underlying economic figures may contradict their milder headlines.
Greenspan's
assessment followed on the heels of Fed Vice-Chairman Donald Kohn's suggestion
Oct. 4 that "[housing] starts may be closer to their trough than to their peak."
The data since then could give bulls even more reason for guarded optimism. On
Oct. 17, the National Association of Home Builders' housing-market index rebounded
to 31 from 30 in September, snapping a 12-month decline from 68 a year earlier. A
day later, a Commerce Dept. report showed housing starts rose 5.9 percent in
September, to an unexpectedly strong pace of 1.772 million units.
"The point of
maximum deterioration in housing activity has probably passed," says Jan Hatzius,
chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs (GS), in an Oct. 20 report. "The sharp
downturn of the past year seems to have brought total housing starts --
single-family starts, multi-family starts, and mobile-home shipments -- close to
the level justified by the underlying demographics."
Permit plunge
Still, Hatzius
comes up with plenty of caveats. Housing activity could drop by another 300,000
housing starts, he projects, as homebuilders work off unwanted inventory and
buyers shift from single-family units to multifamily and mobile homes. That would
come on top of a decline of 400,000 housing starts already, Hatzius says.
Others maintain
that the housing downturn still has a long way to go. "Commentary suggesting
housing demand is recovering, based on the latest homebuilder and mortgage
applications readings, appears to be more wishful thinking than fact," says Keith
Hembre, chief economist at First American Funds, in an Oct. 20 report.
Housing may have
stabilized somewhat, but it's probably only temporary, according to David
Rosenberg, North American economist at Merrill Lynch (MER). The unexpected
September surge in housing starts came alongside a 6.3 percent drop in building
permits to their slowest pace since October 2001. A decline in building permits
has accompanied a rise in housing starts only six times since 2003, according to
Rosenberg, and starts fell a month later on five of those occasions.
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