Dallas, TX
June 4, 2009, 08:00 EST
Dr. Joe Duarte's Market I.Q.


The Internet's Intelligence Digest
Intelligence, Market Timing, And Trading Strategy For Traders and Investors


Housing Recovery Still Wobbly
What's Hot Today:
U.S. stock futures were predicting a higher opening for stocks on Thursday. Overnight Asia and Europe were mixed. Oil was gaining ground. Gold was stabilizing.

Today's Economic Calendar:
  • 8:30 a.m. Initial Jobless Claims For May 30 Week: Expected: -3K. Previous: -13K.

  • 8:30 a.m. 1Q Productivity: Expected: +1.2%. Previous: +0.8%.

  • 8:30 a.m. 1Q Labor Costs: Expected: +2.9%. Previous: +3.3%.

  • 10:00 a.m. DJ-BTMU Business Barometer For May 23: Previous: -0.2%.

  • 10:30 a.m. May 29 EIA Natural Gas Inventories

  • May Chain-Store Sales
News For Thought

Obama Aims For Massachussetts style health care. Despite mixed review on the Mass. health care program, President Obama wants to model his health care plan after the state's. According to The Hill.com, Mr. Obama "told Democratic Sens. Edward Kennedy (Mass.) and Max Baucus (Mont.) that their legislation must include a government-run insurance option that would compete against the private sector. He also reaffirmed his support for a Massachusetts-style insurance exchange. By plunging into the details of the reform rather than cheering from the sidelines, as he has done for months, Obama raises the political stakes for the summer’s big legislative battle, and will hearten liberals who have yearned for his intervention to put a public-sector option on the table."

Congress unhappy about closing of auto dealers. According to Politico.com: "Just two days after the General Motors bankruptcy was announced, Democratic and Republican senators slammed the company and it’s equally troubled cousin Chrysler for their plans to close thousands of auto dealerships. The comments, and the political pressure they represent, clash with President Barack Obama’s promise that the federal government would take a “hands off” approach to its ownership stake in GM."

Hummer goes to automobile rookies. According to AP: "Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery, which said Tuesday it was buying the General Motors unit, is four years old and has just 4,300 employees. It makes vehicles, but they are cement mixers and tow trucks, not passenger cars."

Tell the people how you spent their money. According to The Wall Street Journal: "Pelosi directed House officials to post office-expense reports online in the wake of disclosures that lawmakers spent some taxpayer money on luxury-car leases, big-screen TVs and flowers. " Some things are probably left alone.

Monster Employment Index suggests employment situation may have "stabilized." In a June 4 press release, Monster Worldwide noted: "The Monster Employment Index edged two points lower in May, as U.S. online recruitment activity eased slightly following a seasonal rise in April. Year-over-year, the Index was down 29 percent, a slight improvement from the previous month, indicating the rate of slowdown in the labor market may have stabilized." The released added: "Although the Monster Employment Index experienced a mild decline in May, there are emerging signs of stability in the hiring market. The Index has remained within a four-point band since January and the annual pace of decline seems to have leveled off" said Jesse Harriott, senior vice president and chief knowledge officer at Monster Worldwide. "While demand has eased across most sectors of the economy, industries such as education, retail and public administration are providing some bright spots."

Housing Recovery Still Wobbly
External Factors Hold The Key To Housing Fix

Home builders are reporting that they see signs of stabilization in their business. But the stocks in the sector are lagging the market, suggesting that the market isn't betting on any housing boom for some time.

According to The Wall Street Journal: "Two big builders, Toll Brothers Inc. and Hovnanian Enterprises Inc., said losses in the fiscal second quarter ended April 30 shrank from year-earlier levels as lower prices lured some buyers back into the market." Yet, when more data is examined, what is clear is that although houses are moving, pricing power is non existent. The Journal reported: "A report Wednesday from IHS Global Insight, a research firm in Lexington, Mass., said home prices on average fell at an annual rate of 2.2% in this year's first quarter, compared with a 12.5% rate in the fourth quarter of 2008. The report is based on price data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency. In the latest quarter, prices were down in 199 of 330 metropolitan areas examined in the study. In the fourth quarter, 312 metro areas showed declines."

In other words, it's all in how you look at it. If you bought a house ten years ago, it's possible that if you are able to sell it, you may get more for it than what you paid for it. But that's not a guarantee if you buy one now, as prices have fallen precipitously over the last couple of years.

More important is the fact that existing homes now have to compete with brand new homes that are selling at more competitive prices.

And there are other things to consider, such as "rising unemployment and increases in the foreclosure rate. Foreclosure actions were initiated on 1.4% of first-lien home mortgages in this year's first quarter, up from 1.0% a year earlier, the Mortgage Bankers Association said last week. Meanwhile, after falling to their lowest levels since the 1950s, mortgage interest rates have increased. In the week ended May 29, the average interest rate for new 30-year fixed-rate mortgages jumped to 5.25% from 4.81% a week earlier."

The rapid increase in mortgage rates has put a damper on home loan refinancing, and is a direct result of heavy selling in the U.S. Ten Year note (TNX), where yields recently topped 3.6%.



Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com


Home builders are still reporting huge losses, even if they are smaller than they were last year at this time. Hovnanian reported a loss of $118.6 million for its latest quarter, ending April 30, down from last year's loss of $340.7 million during the same quarter. Toll Brothers booked a loss of $83.2 million for the fiscal second quarter ended April 30, compared with a loss of $93.7 million a year earlier. Both builders cited decreases in land values as important factors in their numbers.

The SPDR Homebuilders ETF (NYSE: XHB) has failed to make a new high from its March bottom during the recent rally, lagging the S & P 500. XHB topped out on May 5 of this year, after rallying from its March lows.



Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com


Other housing industry related stocks, such as Lowe's (NYSE: LOW), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), and furniture retailer Ethan Allen (NYSE: ETH) have also stalled after rallying off of thei March bottom in the stock market.



Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com


Most interesting is the relationship between the stall in housing related stocks and the rally in the price of gasoline, as illustrated by the U.S. Gasoline ETF (NYSE: UGA), which has been in rally mode since December 2008.



Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com


Conclusion

The housing market is dependent on several factors: the status of the employment market, interest rates, and to some degree the overall price of significant commodities, such as gasoline.

As interest rates and gasoline prices have risen, so have the housing and related stocks started to falter, suggesting that despite some hopeful sounding remarks from the homebuilders, there are still enough external influences that could derail what seems to be the start of a very fragile attempt at a bottom.

The employment report, due out on Friday, will give us more information about the job market, the centerpiece of the U.S. economy. It will also be interesting to see how interest rates, energy prices, and the housing stocks in particular respond to the numbers.

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Market Moves - Stock Of The Day
Nasdaq Biotech ETF (NYSE: IBB) Bucks Downdraft In Stocks
One of the stock market's recent wallflowers, the Nasdaq Biotech ETF (NYSE: IBB) moved nicely higher on June 3rd.



Chart Courtesy of StockCharts.com


Biotech has slept through the market's rally since things bottomed out in March. In fact after bottoming on March 6, along with the market, and bouncing, IBB had gone mostly nowhere. Yet, as the ASCO conference kicked into high gear and the oncology news about new drugs and drug trials trickled out, we saw the sector pick up some steam, as we thought that it would, and wrote in this space.

What's most interesting, though, is that on June 3rd, as the overall market tumbled, IBB made a new high from the March bottom, a sign of strength.

Sure there was Carl Icahn shaking up Biogen's board of directors, and more news about drugs and things. But there was nothing, that we could see, that was earth shattering.

That kind of action usually means that smart money guys know something about mergers, or drug trials. Maybe even something about what the White House plans to do with biotech in its health care plan.

As chart watchers, we need to pay special attention to this sector, as it's beginning to show some important activity. We are currently long IBB. Check out our tech timing section for more details.

 


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