xhb posts
FeedPosted Jun 26th 2009 2:30PM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, KB HOME (KBH)

Shares in homebuilder
KB Home (NYSE:
KBH) dropped more than 8% as of mid-day Friday following the company's earnings release. Earnings per share for the quarter ending May 31 were a loss of $1.03, or $78.4 million, on $384.5 million in revenue, compared to the $0.64 average loss expected from analysts. The expected earnings range was between a $0.03 and a $1.40 loss, reflecting uncertainty about the writedowns needed on home inventories, land, and joint ventures.
When the housing market was at its peak in 2006, KB Home's sales topped $3 billion in one quarter. The company has struggled since, as the worst housing market in generations has led to a decline in housing starts of more than 75% from the peak to the present.
Continue reading KB Home drops amid more losses
Posted Jun 9th 2009 9:00AM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Housing
The major indices continued to rally into the close Monday, after spending most of the day down substantially. The Dow ended the day up fractionally and the S&P 500 was down less than one point. Institutional money continues to enter the markets, says Jim Cramer, and that has limited the size and duration of pullbacks.
Even as the uncertainty comes out of the markets, the clarity that replaces it is tepid at best. But with the S&P 500 resting at seven-month highs, one troublesome sector has badly lagged: housing and home-building stocks.
Continue reading Markets are up, but what about housing?
Posted May 4th 2009 4:00PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Adobe Systems (ADBE), Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), Crocs Inc (CROX)

If you have been waiting and hoping for a pullback of any size, the moves here are probably starting to make as much sense as using the notion that you should buy just because a company is keeping the same dividend it has always had. The markets screamed higher again today on the heels of some
very solid housing data and that has the bulls firmly in charge again. In turn, market bears are becoming about as popular today as management of troubled banks. Here were today's unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 8,410.81 +198.40 (2.42%)
S&P 500 907.24 +29.72 (3.39%)
Nasdaq 1,763.56 +44.36 (2.58%)
Top Analyst
Upgrades and DowngradesContinue reading Closing Bell: If the pullback never comes... (BAC, WFC, XHB, CROX, DNDN, BRK.A, ADBE)
Posted Aug 7th 2008 3:01PM by Todd Harrison (RSS feed)
Filed under: Wal-Mart (WMT), Indices, Commodities, Oil, Housing
Minyanville Professor Quint Tatro dares to share the kind of keen insight and actionable information you won't find in any prospectus. For more original thought, visit www.minyanville.com.
There are a few things I am watching for today to give me better clues as to the internal character of the market.
Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT): It's off on retail numbers after the stock broke out of a four-month consolidation pattern on good volume. If the stock catches a bid, it is an indication that institutional investors are back stalking retail plays and would be bullish for the general market.
Energy ETF (AMEX: XLE): Energy has recently broken a longer term trend going back to mid-2006. It is bouncing off recent lows on very light volume. If money continues to rotate out of this sector, finding a home in the likes of retail, housing and financials, again a bullish sign. I initiated a short position in XLE this morning.
Financial ETF (AMEX: XLF): Financials have been and will continue to be the key to the market's future. After recapturing the 50-day moving average, this ETF is being brought down by AIG (AIG) and needs to regain its footing. Some consolidation is fine, but anything back below $20 would have me heading back towards the bunker.
Homebuilders ETF (AMEX: XHB): The homebuilders continue to perk up and also remain a key to the future of the tape. They are probing green today above their 50-day moving average on decent early volume. A break here above yesterday's high going on to attack the $19.00 level is also a bullish sign.
These are things I am watching for which will give me my clues to start wading back into the market with real capital.
(Prof. Tatro has positions in WMT, XLE, XLF, XHB).
Posted Jul 18th 2007 8:40AM by Kevin Kelly (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad news, Industry
I've told BloggingStocks readers several times to sit and wait on the home builders, at least for the time being, because the news flow coming from the group remains overwhelmingly negative. This thesis is not very contrarian, in fact it seems to be the going opinion on Wall Street, but more importantly it's the only take that makes sense to me at this point simply because I think the real estate markets became so overheated several years ago that the diffusal period for this bubble is not over yet.
Today another
piece of news quantified this theory -- the New Home Sentiment Index. This index is a measure of builder's attitudes towards the current market. This month the figure came in at 24, the lowest reading since January 1991. This was significantly worse than the expectations for a reading of 27.
As a result of higher mortgage rates (30 year mortgage rates sitting right around year's high), the demand for big home builders decreases according to the
AP report. In addition, although the National Association of Realtors is expecting an increase in new home sales next year, they still expect the total figure to be below 2006 levels.
Although all this news could be indicating a bottoming-out in the homebuilding sector, I still think it's too risky to jump in unless an investor tries to hedge out short term risk. He could do this either by purchasing puts on homebuilding stocks he owns or by shorting the
Streettracks Homebuilder ETF (AMEX:
XHB) if he believes his favorite homebuilder is superior to the average.
Posted Mar 13th 2007 1:04PM by Steven Halpern (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Newsletters, Economic data
Just prior to market's sharp decline, Peter Way cautioned his readers, "There are increasing odds that some market-wide bad times are ahead, and may be getting closer."
Unlike many advisors whose forecasts are based on highly subjective criteria, Way's prediction was based on a specific set of factors that he monitors -- the trading activities of institutional market makers, the positions they establish for their "big fund" clients, and the insurance they take out to hedge these positions. It's a fascinating strategy for more sophisticated investors.
Here, in his Block Trader ETF Monitor he explains, "For some time now, the million-dollar market-makers have sensed that their big fund clients are prepared to flee at a moment's notice. And they know that the exit door is only just so big. Nowhere big enough to let them all through.
Continue reading Big money market makers bet on homebuilders and internets