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To: John Vosilla who wrote (63797)6/15/2006 11:26:28 AM
From: shades  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
Negative Analyst Sentiment Grows Against Home Builders

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By Janet Morrissey
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Several more analysts cut profit projections and one downgraded the home-building sector as negative sentiment toward home-building stocks accelerated Thursday.

"Much like lemmings going over a cliff into the sea, sell-side analysts appear to be in a race to the bottom," Susquehanna Financial analyst Stephen East said in a note. "Our fear is that the race to the bottom is based less on fundamentals and more on the desire to set the bar so low that builders 'can't miss our numbers."'

Morgan Stanley analyst Rob Stevenson downgraded the sector to cautious from attractive and cut his price targets and earnings projections for KB Home (KBH), Lennar Corp. (LEN) and Pulte Homes (PHM) for 2006 and 2007.

Stevenson noted that the group is down 30% so far in 2006. "One could easily argue that our downgrade is 'too little too late,"' said Stevenson. However, he believes there's still more downside to come, based on the supply-demand imbalance, the increasing odds of further Fed rate increases, and the probability that fundamentals will get worse before they get better.

He noted that the yield on the 10-year treasury rose 80 basis points between mid-January and mid-May. In general, he said, homebuilders tend to underperform the broader market by 16% when the 10-year yield increases 100 basis points. "With continuing inflation concerns and the increasing likelihood that the Fed will continue to raise rates in June and August, we expect interest-rate headwinds to continue to negatively impact the homebuilder stocks for some time," he said.

Stevenson said home-building stocks could potentially fall another 15% to 25% before they bottom.

Susquehanna's East, whose earnings projections had been on the lower end of analysts' estimates over the past six to nine months, trimmed his projections further in light of the weaker-than-expected housing environment.

"The selling season turned out to be a much bigger flop than virtually anybody had imagined," East said. "Consequently, we have gone through another round of estimate cuts."

However, East's cuts were less pronounced than some of his rivals' changes. "Possibly we are still overestimating on the way down, but we are trying to predict the most likely earnings scenarios given our data point today - not trying to sandbag the Street," he said.

East said order rates are down 20% to 50% in some of the hotter markets while incentives and inventories have climbed dramatically. "Late May and early June became the season of confession for builders, as one after another lined up to spill the beans on a very pathetic selling season," said East. "Against this backdrop, managements have been lowering guidance and we have been lowering estimates."

East said there's too much uncertainty in the industry to make longer-term predictions. "2007 is a crapshoot," he said. However, he said there have been some signs that cancellation rates and inventories are beginning to stabilize.

East is predicting earnings will be down 4% on average in 2006, with Pulte Homes Inc. (PHM) seeing the biggest decline at 17%, and Meritage Homes Corp. (MTH) seeing positive earnings growth of 14%. He expects earnings to fall 6% on average in 2007, with Standard Pacific Corp. (SPF) taking the biggest hit with a 15% decline, and Centex Corp. (CTX) enjoying 4% positive earnings growth.

JMP analyst Alex Barron cuts his estimates and price targets on home builders across the board Thursday. "We believe the worst is yet to come," he said. He sees home builders' earnings plummeting 20% to 40% in 2007. He also cut his ratings on D.R. Horton and Meritage to market outperform from strong buy, and lowered KB Home to market perform from market outperform.

Merrill Lynch reinstated coverage of the group late Wednesday, with a buy rating on Centex, and neutral ratings on D.R. Horton (DHI), KB Home, Lennar, Pulte and Toll Brothers (TOL). Analyst Kenneth Zener expects home builders' earnings to decline in 2006 and 2007, but remain positive. He noted that housing stocks have fallen 43% since their peak in July 2005, and he believes the stocks already reflect the negative earnings revisions which began in April 2006.

The downgrades and earnings cuts are just the latest in the sector.

Earlier this week, UBS analyst Margaret Whelan cut her earnings per share estimates for home builders by 20% in 2006 and 27% in 2007. She said new-home sales had been falling at a faster pace than anticipated.

Last week, Wachovia analyst Carl Reichardt downgraded the sector to market weight and cut earnings projections, where he's now predicting home builders' earnings-per-share to fall 11% on average in 2006 and 32% in 2007. "We clearly misjudged the magnitude and sharpness of the decline in new-home demand and increase in new and existing home supply," he said in a note. However, he said, he doesn't expect an extended downturn similar to that of the early 1980s or late 1980s without a housing liquidity crisis.

Last month, Banc of America Securities analyst Daniel Oppenheim slashed price targets by 17% and earnings guidance for 2007 by 15%. He expects earnings to fall 22% on average in 2007.

Still, Morgan Stanley's Stevenson said he believes the underlying demographic and operational trends still make home builders a good long-term investment. However, investment in the next nine to 12 months would be "challenging."

All of this could change if a major builder decided to do a leveraged buyout or if interest rates moved materially lower, Stevenson said. If a major builder opted to go private, he said, it would "significant impact valuations in the sector for quite some time."

All of this comes as two major builders - KB Home and Lennar - are poised to release their fiscal second-quarter results over the next few days.

-By Janet Morrissey, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2118; janet.morrissey@dowjones.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

June 15, 2006 11:03 ET (15:03 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 11 03 AM EDT 06-15-06



To: John Vosilla who wrote (63797)6/15/2006 11:33:42 AM
From: shades  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
Fannie's Restatement 'Astounding Failure' - Hagel

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By Siobhan Hughes
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--Pounding his fist repeatedly on the dais at a Senate Banking Committee hearing, Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., lashed out at those who said Fannie Mae's (FNM) ongoing restatement of at least $11 billion wasn't as bad as the collapse of Enron Corp. (ENE).

Hagel called the restatement "an astounding failure of management and board response, driven clearly by self-interest and greed." He said that "when we reference this issue in the context of 'the best we can say is it's no Enron,' now that's a helluva" high standard.

Hagel is one of the lawmakers calling most loudly for tighter regulation of giant mortgage financiers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FRE). His comments come more than three weeks after regulators fined Fannie Mae $400 million to settle allegations that it had misstated financial statements from at least 1998 through 2004.

The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight also chronicled a massive accounting scandal at the company in which senior management allegedly manipulated earnings to trigger hundreds of millions of dollars in bonuses.

Sen. John Sununu, R-N.H., said that "there are differences" between Enron and Fannie Mae. "Perhaps the biggest difference at the moment is that the guys at Enron have been convicted," he said.

Fannie Mae's current chief executive, Daniel Mudd, has apologized and has said that the company is making strides as it seeks to recover.

Hagel urged Senate leaders to bring a bill to step up regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac up for a vote on the Senate floor.

"This issue needs to be dealt with," Hagel said. "It needs to come before the Senate and I hope the majority and minority leader of the Senate or their staff are taking note of this hearing this morning." I


-By Siobhan Hughes, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6654; siobhan.hughes@dowjones.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

June 15, 2006 11:32 ET (15:32 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 11 32 AM EDT 06-15-06



To: John Vosilla who wrote (63797)6/17/2006 1:12:48 AM
From: shades  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110194
 
Federal Reserve Hears About Predatory Mortgage Practices

(loantech better tell his friends to watch out! philster says there gonna be a lot of arrests at the end of this - I keep wondering who can afford the tax to house all the new prisoners?)

By Mark Golden
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

SAN FRANCISCO (Dow Jones)--The booming popularity of non-traditional loans the past couple of years, especially to borrowers with low credit scores, is beginning to result in delinquencies and defaults, according to a Federal Reserve Board hearing Friday in San Francisco.

New homeowners, often those for whom English is a second language, frequently don't know the basics of what they are agreeing to on closing day, the California Reinvestment Coalition's Kevin Stein said at the hearing led by Federal Reserve Board Governor Mark Olson.

Borrowers' understanding of their interest rates, closing costs, and prepayment penalties differ from what they are getting, said Stein, adding that the misunderstanding is often rooted in what consumers are told by unscrupulous mortgage brokers.

"It can be as big an item as the borrowers thinking they're getting a fixed interest rate when they're getting an adjustable rate. They have no idea that their payments are going to balloon in a couple of years, and they won't be able to possibly afford them," he said.

Often, said Stein, Latino brokers are taking advantage of trust they receive in Latino neighborhoods. Also, lower-income consumers are being misled. (BWAHAHA - so much for LATIN UNITY - the bible did say the love of money is the ROOT of all evil - HAHA)

"We've known there are pockets of predatory lending in certain sub-prime markets, and that's beginning to be reflected now in delinquencies," said Olson.

"There are some bad actors out there. There's no question about that," the Fed governor added.

One broker in attendance estimated that in the Bay Area some 40%-50% of home mortgages currently are being filed with undocumented - or "stated" - incomes, which is usually inflated so that the borrowers qualify for the loan. In addition, he said, brokers and other loan originators will submit false information about assets to get the loan through, often with the encouragement of even large banks. The banks don't check out the undocumented information because they sell the mortgages quickly, he said.

Consumers are also sometimes put into products they shouldn't be, resulting in unnecessarily high costs and increasing risks of default, said Olson.

A strong appetite in the secondary market for nontraditional mortgage products may have led to a relaxation of underwriting standards.

The Fed Board is holding public hearings on lending under the provisions of the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994. The last time the Fed Board held hearings on the matter was in 2000.

Friday's hearing was the third of four. The final hearing is scheduled for July 11 in Atlanta.

-By Mark Golden, Dow Jones Newswires; 415-765-6118; Mark.Golden@dowjones.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

June 16, 2006 16:23 ET (20:23 GMT)