Connect with us

Uncategorized

At the Edge of Chaos: Why Homebuilders Have a Long-Term Advantage, But Face a Short-Term Bumpy Ride

The working premise for 2023 is that, as long as the Fed continues to raise rates, stocks will struggle. In fact, there is a high level of speculation…

Published

on

The working premise for 2023 is that, as long as the Fed continues to raise rates, stocks will struggle. In fact, there is a high level of speculation about the so called "terminal rate," the interest rate to which the Fed is willing to go to in order to whip inflation. As of the most recent Fed "dot plot", the central bank has communicated that it may raise rates above 5%.

It doesn't take a whole lot of imagination to pencil in a whole lot of damage to both the stock market and the economy if they go much beyond that. That said, there are still some sectors of the stock market which will, more likely than not, outperform others due to the state of the supply and demand balance in their business. One of them is housing.

Housing Will Likely Surprise to the Upside

I've been bullish on the homebuilder stocks for quite a while. I was even bullish when the sector crashed and burned in the middle of 2022 as the summer blowoff in prices for existing homes imploded. And I remain long-term bullish.

Of course, as the Fed continues to raise interest rates, mortgage rates will likely retain their recent upward bias. This will have a negative effect on home sales and create short-term difficulties for homebuilders. The recent rebound in mortgage rates will not be helpful.

At the same time, it's important to delineate the important differences between the homebuilders (new housing), the existing home markets, and the rental markets.. That's because even though they are all related, each has its own set of internal dynamics which influence how they operate.

The Brave New World of Housing

To understand the U.S. housing markets it's important to review the two seismic events in recent history which have shaped the current supply and demand balance: the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis and the COVID pandemic. Although they were twelve years apart, they are irreversibly intertwined and, together, created the environment which favors homebuilders the most for the present and likely for the future.

After the 2008 crash, many homebuilders faced near-death experiences as their overbuilt inventory sat idle for years. As a result, they stopped building homes. This created a long-term supply crunch for new homes. Moreover, when the overall situation improved, they still didn't overbuild. This perpetuated the undersupply of new homes, even as populations grew and shifted.

The pandemic caused a population shift from cities to suburbs and, in many cases, to other states, especially the sunbelt, where COVID restrictions were fewer and jobs and economies recovered faster compared to states which kept pandemic restrictions in place longer.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's massive QE and zero interest rates added to the demand for housing, as buyers fleeing cities looked to own their homes instead of renting apartments. This demand was very pronounced in the sunbelt and states with lower restrictions, due to the large numbers of people who moved there. Initially, this also favored landlords in those areas, as the short supply of homes drove many to rent.

When the Federal Reserve began their interest rate increases, all segments of the housing market stumbled. But as time has passed, both realtors who deal in existing homes and landlords have struggled more than homebuilders. In fact, homebuilders have remained in the driver's seat, as a low supply of existing homes in preferred locations, persistently high rents from landlords, and a continuation of the migration to the sunbelt, combined with a limited supply of new homes, have perpetuated the most favorable conditions for homebuilders in a generation.

Perhaps the take-home message is that, even after a huge increase in interest rates in 2022, homebuilders are still in a very profitable position.

REITs and Rentals - Online Brokers and Existing Homes

For stock investors, the rental market is best traded via the real estate investment trusts (REITs). These are fairly easy to trade, because they will usually rally when interest rates fall, and fall in price when interest rates rise. They are particularly sensitive to the Federal Reserve's interest rates and to the trend in yields in government bonds, especially the U.S. Ten Year note (TNX).

In the current market, corporate entities own a disproportionate amount of rental units. This dominance of the market, combined with low supply in attractive locations, has kept rents at high levels for an extended period of time. But as the economy has slowed, landlords in high tax, high-regulation states have seen their vacancy rates rise, while those in low tax, low regulation states have seen high occupancy rates.

Existing homes are equally interest rate-sensitive, but are a bit harder to trade via the stock market. One way to trade the trend in existing homes is via the shares of companies, which own real estate brokerages such as online broker Redfin (RDFN).

Generally speaking, these types of stocks do well when existing home sales are rising and interest rates are falling. 

Homebuilders Beat to a Different Drum

Homebuilder stocks are also interest rate-sensitive, as mortgage rates are tied to bond yields. As a result, the price of stocks such as D.R. Horton (DHI) and Lennar (LEN) often follow the same price trend as REITs and online brokers.

But the current situation is slightly different. You can see that shares of D.R. Horton and Lennar fell for several months in 2022 as the U.S. Ten Year Old Note yield rose. However, the stocks responded well when the yields reversed. You can see that RDFN shares have yet to recover.

The reason that homebuilder stocks responded more favorably to the yield reversal is multifold:

  • There are fewer new homes available than there is demand. That's because homebuilders stopped building after the 2008 housing crash and never quite picked up the rate of building to the levels prior to the crash.
  • Demand for new homes remains high because there is a migration from high tax states to low tax states with a higher availability of jobs – especially sunbelt states such as Texas, Florida, and Georgia.
  • Older homes are often less attractive than new homes due to their outdated amenities, location limitations, and, in many cases, poor upkeep. Moreover, in some states, rents are so high that it makes more sense to own a home.

These factors make new homes more attractive than existing homes. As a result, homebuilders remain in a more favorable position than real estate brokers and landlords.

Of course, that does not guarantee uninterrupted up trends in these stocks. And, if interest rates do rise significantly, they will have an adverse effect on the homebuilder stocks. Yet, when they eventually fall, the homebuilders will be in a better position than many sectors in the stock market because supply is on their side.

Higher interest rates are never good for most stocks. But it's still possible to make money in stocks during periods of rising interest rates, if you know where to look. You can see when and how to fight the Fed and win in my latest video here.

I own shares in DHI and LEN. 

Welcome to the Edge of Chaos:

"The edge of chaos is a transition space between order and disorder that is hypothesized to exist within a wide variety of systems. This transition zone is a region of bounded instability that engenders a constant dynamic interplay between order and disorder." – Complexity Labs

NYAD Remains 200-Day Moving Average

The New York Stock Exchange Advance Decline line (NYAD) remained below its 50- and 200-day moving averages, but really went nowhere in the final week of the year.

A similar picture can be seen in VIX, which means no major bets from put buyers materialized. When VIX rises, stocks tend to fall, as rising put volume is a sign that market makers are selling stock index futures in order to hedge their put sales to the public. A fall in VIX is bullish, as it means less put option buying. The lack of rise in VIX has been the reason for the lack of a complete meltdown in stocks.

Liquidity remained surprisingly stable as the Eurodollar Index (XED) has been trending sideways to slightly higher for the past few weeks.

The S&P 500 (SPX) seems to have found temporary support at 3800, but remains below its 20-, 50-, and 200-day moving averages. Accumulation/Distribution (ADI) has stabilized, but On Balance Volume (OBV) remains near its recent lows. ADI suggests short sellers are making quick profits and getting out, while OBV suggests that sellers are not quite done yet.

The Nasdaq 100 index (NDX) may have made a triple bottom, with the 10,500-10,700 price area bringing in some short covering.


To get the latest up-to-date information on options trading, check out Options Trading for Dummies, now in its 4th Edition—Get Your Copy Now! Now also available in Audible audiobook format!

#1 New Release on Options Trading!

Good news! I've made my NYAD-Complexity - Chaos chart (featured on my YD5 videos) and a few other favorites public. You can find them here.


Joe Duarte

In The Money Options


Joe Duarte is a former money manager, an active trader, and a widely recognized independent stock market analyst since 1987. He is author of eight investment books, including the best-selling Trading Options for Dummies, rated a TOP Options Book for 2018 by Benzinga.com and now in its third edition, plus The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book and six other trading books.

The Everything Investing in Your 20s and 30s Book is available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble. It has also been recommended as a Washington Post Color of Money Book of the Month.

To receive Joe's exclusive stock, option and ETF recommendations, in your mailbox every week visit https://joeduarteinthemoneyoptions.com/secure/order_email.asp.

Read More

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

“What’s More Tragic Is Capitalism”: BLM Faces Bankruptcy As Founder Cullors Is Cut By Warner Bros

"What’s More Tragic Is Capitalism": BLM Faces Bankruptcy As Founder Cullors Is Cut By Warner Bros

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

Two years…

Published

on

"What's More Tragic Is Capitalism": BLM Faces Bankruptcy As Founder Cullors Is Cut By Warner Bros

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

Two years ago, I wrote columns about companies pouring money into Black Lives Matter to establish their bona fides as “antiracist” corporations. The money continued to flow despite serious questions raised about BLM’s management and accounting. Democratic prosecutors like New York Attorney General Letitia James showed little interest in these allegations even as James sought to disband the National Rifle Association (NRA) over similar allegations. At the same time, Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors cashed in with companies like Warner Bros. eager to give her massive contracts to signal their own reformed status. It now appears that BLM is facing bankruptcy after burning through tens of millions and Warner Bros. cut ties with Cullors after the contract produced no — zero — new programming.

Some states belatedly investigated BLM as founders like Cullors seemed to scatter to the winds.

Gone are tens of millions of dollars, including millions spent on luxury mansions and windfalls for close associates of BLM leaders.

The usual suspects gathered around the activists like former Clinton campaign general counsel Marc Elias, who later removed himself from his “key role” as the scandals grew.

When questions were raised about the lack of accounting and questionable spending, BLM attacked critics as “white supremacists.”

Warner Bros. was one of the companies eager to grab its own piece of Cullors to signal its own anti-racist virtues.  It gave Cullors a lucrative contract to guide the company in the creation of both scripted and non-scripted content, focusing on reparations and other forms of social justice. It launched a publicity campaign for everyone to know that it established a “wide-ranging content partnership” with Cullors who would now help guide the massive corporation’s new programming. Calling Cullors “one of the most influential thought leaders in American public life,” Warner Bros. announced that she was going to create a wide array of new programming, including “but not limited to live-action scripted drama and comedy series; longform/event series; unscripted docuseries; animated programming for co-viewing among kids, young adults and families; and original digital content.”

Some are now wondering if Warner Bros. ever intended for this contract to produce anything other than a public relations pitch or whether Cullors took the money and ran without producing even a trailer for an actual product. Indeed, both explanations may be true.

Paying money to Cullors was likely viewed as a type of insurance to protect the company from accusations of racial insensitive. After all, the company was giving creative powers to a person who had no prior experience or demonstrated talent in the area. Yet, Cullors would be developing programming for one of the largest media and entertainment companies in the world.

One can hardly blame Cullors despite criticizism by some on the left for going on a buying spree of luxury properties.

After all, Cullors was previously open about her lack of interest in working with “capitalist” elements. Nevertheless, BLM was run like a Trotskyite study group as the media and corporations poured in support and revenue.

It was glaringly ironic to see companies like Warner Bros. falling over each other to grab their own front person as the group continued boycotts of white-owned businesses. Indeed, if you did not want to be on the wrong end of one of those boycotts, you needed to get Cullors on your payroll.

Much has now changed as companies like Bud Light have been rocked by boycotts over what some view as heavy handed virtue signaling campaigns.

It was quite a change for Cullors and her BLM co-founder, who previously proclaimed “[we] are trained Marxists. We are super versed on, sort of, ideological theories.” She denounced capitalism as worse than COVID-19. Yet, companies like Lululemon rushed to find their own “social justice warrior” while selling leggings for $120 apiece.

When some began to raise questions about Cullors buying luxury homes, Facebook and Twitter censored them.

With increasing concerns over the loss of millions, Cullors eventually stepped down as executive director of the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, as others resigned.  At the same time, the New York Post was revealing that BLM Global Network transferred $6.3 million to Cullors’ spouse, Janaya Khan, and other Canadian activists to purchase a mansion in Toronto in 2021.

According to The Washington Examiner, BLM PAC and a Los Angeles-based jail reform group paid Cullors $20,000 a month. It also spent nearly $26,000 on meetings at a luxury Malibu beach resort in 2019. Reform LA Jails, chaired by Cullors, received $1.4 million, of which $205,000 went to the consulting firm owned by Cullors and her spouse, according to New York magazine.

Once again, while figures like James have spent huge amounts of money and effort to disband the NRA over such accounting and spending controversies, there has been only limited efforts directed against BLM in New York and most states.

Cullors once declared that “while the COVID-19 illness is tragic, what’s more tragic is capitalism.” These companies seem to be trying to prove her point. Yet, at least for Cullors, Warner Bros. fulfilled its slogan that this is all “The stuff that dreams are made of.”

Tyler Durden Sun, 05/28/2023 - 16:00

Read More

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Biden reaches ‘tentative’ US debt ceiling deal: Report

United States President Joe Biden has urged the United States Congress to “pass the agreement right away.“
Amid growing concerns…

Published

on

United States President Joe Biden has urged the United States Congress to “pass the agreement right away.“

Amid growing concerns of a potential default by early June, United States President Joe Biden and House majority leader Representative Kevin McCarthy have reportedly reached an “agreement in principle” to raise the federal government’s multitrillion-dollar debt ceiling.

According to a May 28 report from Reuters citing two sources familiar with the negotiations, the “tentative” agreement to raise the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling was reached after a 90-minute phone call between Biden and McCarthy on May 27.

Since publication time, Biden has confirmed via Twitter the existence of an “agreement in principle," explaining that it will prevent the U.S. from facing a “catastrophic default.“

Biden noted that “over the next day,” the agreement would go to the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate. He urged both chambers to “pass the agreement right away.“

Meanwhile, McCarthy also took to Twitter to confirm the agreement in principle, alleging that Biden “wasted time and refused to negotiate for months.“

Reuters reported that while “the exact details of the deal were not immediately available,” an agreement has been made to limit the U.S. government’s spending for the next two years, excluding expenses related to national security.

“Negotiators have agreed to cap non-defense discretionary spending at 2023 levels for one year and increase it by 1% in 2025,” a source familiar with the deal said.

Related: Debt ceiling crisis: Best practices to navigate this market

This comes only weeks after U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned of a default risk as soon as June 1 if the debt limit isn’t suspended or raised, urging Congress to “act as soon as possible.“

Additionally, The U.S. Congressional Budget Office published a report on May 12, emphasizing that if the debt limit remains unchanged, there is a significant risk “that at some point in the first two weeks of June, the government will no longer be able to pay all of its obligations.“

In recent times, several analysts have shared a similar view that raising the debt ceiling could see more capital inflow into Bitcoin (BTC).

On May 17, MacroJack, a former Wall Street trader, warned his followers in a tweet that the U.S. debt ceiling talks are “all show.“

He emphasized how important it is to own hard assets as the dollar will be “printed into oblivion,” while stating that Bitcoin is the “fastest horse in the race.“

Meanwhile, Jesse Myers, chief operating officer of investment firm Onramp, reminded his 50,100 Twitter followers of what happened during the COVID-19 pandemic, stating that “Bitcoin was the winner during the last round of stimulus.“

He proposed the idea that history might repeat itself if the debt ceiling were to be raised, as it would prompt the Federal Reserve to print more money.

Update on May 28, 2023, at 03:15: This article has been updated to include United States President Joe Biden's tweet.

Magazine: Visa stablecoin plan, debt ceiling’s effect on Bitcoin price: Hodler’s Digest, April 23-29

Read More

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Biden reaches ‘tentative’ US debt ceiling deal: Report

United States President Joe Biden has urged both the United States House and Senate to "pass the agreement right away."
Amid growing…

Published

on

United States President Joe Biden has urged both the United States House and Senate to "pass the agreement right away."

Amid growing concerns of a potential default by early June, the United States President Joe Biden and Republican Kevin McCarthy have reportedly reached an "agreement in principle" to raise the federal government's multi-trillion dollar debt ceiling.

According to a May 28 report from Reuters, citing two sources familiar with the negotiations, the "tentative" agreement to raise the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling was reached after a 90-minute phone call between Biden and McCarthy on May 27.

Following the publication of this article, Biden has since confirmed via Twitter the existence of an "agreement in principle," explaining that it will prevent the U.S. facing a "catostrophic default."

Biden noted that "over the next day," the agreement will go the U.S. House and Senate. He urged both chambers to "pass the agreement right away."

Meanwhile, McCarthy also took to Twitter to confirm the agreement in principle, alleging that Biden "wasted time and refused to negiotate for months."

Reuters reported that while "the exact details of the deal were not immediately available," an agreement has been made to limit the U.S. government's spending for the next two years, excluding expenses related to national security. 

"Negotiators have agreed to cap non-defense discretionary spending at 2023 levels for one year and increase it by 1% in 2025" a source familiar with the deal said.

Related: Debt ceiling crisis: Best practices to navigate this market

This comes only weeks after U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned of a default risk as soon as June 1 if the debt limit isn't suspended or raised, urging Congress to "act as soon as possible."

Additionally, The U.S. Congressional Budget Office (CBO) published a report on May 12, emphasizing that if the debt limit remains unchanged, there is a significant risk "that at some point in the first two weeks of June, the government will no longer be able to pay all of its obligations."

In recent times, several analysts have shared a similiar view that raising the debt ceiling could see more capital inflow into Bitcoin (BTC)

MacroJack, a former Wall Street trader, warned his followers in a tweet on May 17 that the U.S. debt ceiling talks are "all show."

He emphasized how important it is to own hard assets as the dollar will be "printed into oblivion," while stating that Bitcoin is the "fastest horse in the race."

Meanwhile, Jesse Myers, chief operating officer of investment firm Onramp reminded his 50,100 Twitter followers of what happened during the Covid-19 Pandemic, stating that "Bitcoin was the winner during the last round of stimulus."

He proposed the idea that history might repeat itself if the debt ceiling were to be raised, as it would prompt the Federal Reserve to print more money.

Update on May 28, 2023, at 03:15: This article has been updated to include United States President Joe Biden's tweet.

Magazine: Visa stablecoin plan, debt ceiling’s effect on Bitcoin price: Hodler’s Digest, April 23-29

Read More

Continue Reading

Trending