Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
Builders' Bonds Tumble
Submitted: 2007-01-17 16:16:37
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher |
US home builders' bonds have become the biggest losers in the market for debt, with ratings below investment grade.
The debt sold by D.R. Horton Inc., KB Home and other construction companies has fallen an average 3% since May, leaving investors with losses around 1.1% for the year, including reinvested interest.
It equals the worst performance of the 37 industries tracked by Merrill Lynch & Co.
The bonds returned an average 2% through April. Many investors remained confident that the housing market would be able to handle higher interest rates. Yet, with continued increases in rates in both May and June, mortgage rates went to the highest levels in over four years.
The index measuring home-builder confidence has fallen to the lowest level since 1991 for July.
"You have to ask yourself if the worst is over or yet to come," said Timothy Compan, head of corporate bond strategy at Allegiant Asset Management.
The extra spread that investors demand to own home-builder bonds over Treasuries is widening as the housing market declines.
Building permits fell 4.3% in June, according to the Commerce Department. The sales of new houses are expected to fall 9% for the year, said David Berson, chief economist for Fannie Mae. Prices could rise only 2.6% for the year, he said.
KB Home, the nation's fifth-largest home builder, announced last month that profits will grow at the slowest pace in five years for 2006. This is due to higher mortgage rates cutting demand, according to the company.
"Every downturn is longer and deeper than people expect," said D.R. Horton Chief Executive Donald Tomnitz.
D.R. Horton is the third largest builder in the nation. Last week, the company reported its first quarterly profit drop in its 28-year history.
"We are assuming the worst," said Tomnitz.
But the slide among home builders isn't a reason to jump out of the market just yet, said Steven Brooks, an investment-grade debt analyst at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. in Baltimore.
"The credit quality is sound," said Brooks. Housing companies are "very well positioned to manage through a downturn as long as we have reasonable economic and job growth, and interest rates don't go through the roof. It's hard for me to imagine a serious downturn."
Martin Lukac represents http://www.RateEmpire.com and http://www.1AmericanFinancial.com, a finance web-company specializing in real estate and mortgage rates. We specialize in daily updates, mortgage news, rate predictions, mortgage rates and more. Find low home loan mortgage interest rates from hundreds of mortgage companies!
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Stocks Mutual Funds category
- Where to Put a Stop Loss - By: Dr. Winton Felt
Whether you use volatility-based, Fibonacci. Gann, percentage declines, pivot points, or any other method for determining where to put a stop loss, your stop loss will sometimes be triggered just before the stock resumes its climb. Learn to live with it. The alternative can be disastrous. - Select Stocks by Combining Technical and Fundamental Screens - By: Dr. Winton Felt
A stock selection strategy designed to find stocks that are likely to appreciate significantly within a relatively short time should include both fundamental and technical screening systems. The technical is useful for identifying setups and in the timing of purchases and sales. Good fundamentals are the fuel that enable sustained flight. - Be Both a Short-Term Trader and a Long-Term Investor - By: Dr. Winton Felt
Short-term traders often assume less risk than long-term investors. There is a right time and a wrong time to own the stock of every great company. The smartest investors base their decisions on the balance between risk and reward, not on a pre-determined holding period. - Short-Term Stock Trends and Risk Control - By: Dr. Winton Felt
Risk control is more important than being a long-term investor. Stock trends are becoming shorter. Risk is increasing. Riding out all dips in stock price can lead to disaster. - The Advantage of Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) - By: Dr. Winton Felt
In general, ETFs are less volatile than individual stocks, have many of the benefits of sector and index mutual funds, and a relatively low expense ratio. Fraud, as has occurred with standard mutual funds, is virtually impossible. They are worth considering as alternatives to individual stocks and standard mutual funds. - Stock Market Investing: Long-Term or Short-Term? - By: Dr. Winton Felt
To buy and hold stocks for the long-term has been the preferred approach to stock market investing for many decades. However, in a volatile stock market this approach can be very expensive in terms of risk vs. return on investment. The long-term holder may not be taking the wisest course after all. - The Fundamental vs. the Technical in Stock Buy and Sell Decisions - By: Dr. Winton Felt
In a volatile market, technical signals tend to precede announcements of change in the fundamentals of a company. Understand how this works and how to use both the technical and the fundamental in your buy and sell decisions. - What does "Timing the Market" or "Market Timing" Really Mean? - By: Dr. Winton Felt
As practiced by professionals, "market timing" is about buying and selling in accordance with a predetermined set of conditions and rules. It is about following the buy signals and the sell signals. It is not about investing according to how one "feels" about the market, and it is not about the illegal activities of some mutual fund managers that the media has referred to as "market timing." - The Best Stop Loss for Long-Term Investors - By: Dr. Winton Felt
Wherever the stop loss is placed, there is the chance that the stock will reverse course after the stop loss is triggered. We wondered if there was an optimum stop loss placement that would minimize both the loss allowed by the stop loss and the probability of a reversal after the sale. - Diversification and Stop Loss Placement - By: Dr. Winton Felt
Some of the most respected names in the investment world (Granville, Weinstein, Dines, Magee, Zweig, Sperandeo, Schwager, O'Neil, Murphy, and others all agree on the necessity of using stop losses. Though they do not seem to agree on how much of a stock decline to allow selling, they are much closer in their thinking than is apparent on the surface.
