NBN Online for the week of October 26, 2009

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Housing Not Out of the Woods Despite Growing Economy
NAHB Sounds Legislative Alert on Tax Credit Extension
Builders Assist Flood Recovery Effort in Atlanta Region
Coast to Coast
‘Shadow Market’ Clouds Housing Recovery
Politics & Government
Consumer Financial Protection Bill Raises Concerns
Economics & Finance
Housing Starts Flat in September
Zandi Forecasts More Home Price Declines Ahead
Home Price Decline Nears Bottom, But Volatility Expected
Big Builders Expected to Lose Market Edge in a Few Years
Tight Lending Expected at Small Banks for Another Year
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders’ Tip: How to Improve Your Hole Saw's Performance
Downturn
Webinar to Discuss Marketing to Help Prepare for Recovery
Business Management
New Software Helps Builders Get to Closings Faster
IBS
Enter nahb Star by Nov. 2 to Sing the National Anthem at IBS
Slots Filling Up for Spokesperson Training at Builders' Show
Sales
One Judge's Top 10 Insider Tips on Winning The Nationals
Custom
Get a Custom View of San Diego on NAHB’s Home Tour
Safety
Apply for SAFE Work Site Safety Award by Nov. 9
Remodelers
Firms Can Now Apply for Lead Paint Rule Certification
Remodeling, Like New-Home Building, Boosts Local Economies
Women
Council Renamed 'Professional Women in Building'
Education
Webcast Course on Dec. 10 to Teach Customer Service Skills
Nominations for 2009 Designee of the Year Awards Due Nov. 13
Education Calendar
Green Building
Certified Green Professionals Need Up-to-Date Listings
NAHB Presents People’s Choice Award at Solar Decathlon
Green Building Awards Entries Now Being Accepted
environment
NAHB Opposes Petition to Revise EPA Lead Paint Rules
Protection of Actual Polar Bear Habitat in Alaska Proposed
Building Products
Black & Decker Puts 16 Socket Sizes in One Wrench
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on the DIY Network
Endowment
HELP Grant Puts Construction Program on Path to Success
Submissions for Lee S. Evans Scholarships Due Oct. 30
Applications for Endowment IBS Scholarships Due Oct. 30
Association News
NAHB Member Is The View's 'Ultimate Volunteer'
Celebrate Windows 7 With Big HP Savings — Only Till Oct. 29
Earn One Free Hertz Rental Day for Every Two Hertz Rentals
Save Big — at Least 60% — on Selected FedEx Shipping
Authorization Process for GM’s $500 Offer Now Much Easier
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Housing Starts Flat in September

Zandi Forecasts More Home Price Declines Ahead

Home Price Decline Nears Bottom, But Volatility Expected

Tight Lending Expected at Small Banks for Another Year

Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends

Big Builders Expected to Lose Market Edge in a Few Years

The market share of the 10 largest public builders is expected to grow to as much as 30% during the next three to four years, but private smaller builders will have the advantage at the end of that period as Generation Y, a generation comparable in size to the baby boomers, enters the market in full force, according to industry analysts at NAHB’s Fall Construction Forecast Conference in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 21.

Discussing the structure of the industry as it emerges from the downturn, Carl Reichardt, Jr., managing director and senior research analyst at Wells Fargo Securities, and David Goldberg, home building analyst at UBS Securities, said that if small builders can “stay lean until 2013,” demographics will increase the “size of the demand pie” and the housing market will begin to fragment and provide them with more opportunities.

However, surviving until then will be difficult, and both Reichardt and Goldberg acknowledged that many small builders in business today may have a hard time hanging on during the next few critical years.

“Changing trends will favor smaller, more nimble builders,” Goldberg said, citing one builder in the Northeast who has been able to weather the downturn by successfully changing his business from build-to-own to build-to-rent.

Other builders will survive by “shutting down and thinking about how to get back into the business” when the time is right, he said. “Being nimble is what it’s all about. There will be opportunities, but builders will have to be very creative.”

The big builders have survived, Reichardt said, because they were able to generate liquidity by monetizing land, selling in bulk, reducing their existing spec homes, laying off as much as 65% of their employees and shifting to smaller homes with fewer amenities aimed at first-time buyers using FHA financing. 

While good for increasing market share during the near-term, Reichardt said these adjustments are unsustainable — primarily because big builders have established a large geographic footprint with many of their communities located in the most volatile housing markets in the country.

Surviving on smaller margins for the time being, big builders are coming to a crossroads, he said, where they will have to decide to grow, shrink or consolidate.

“Because fixed costs are so high, consolidation for the publics makes sense,” Reichardt said, while noting that today’s hyper-competition for customers and products among big builders is diluting their margins and returns.

Goldberg said that while size may help companies survive the next several years, it’s an advantage that is “unlikely to be sustained.” Instead, he said experienced smaller builders with roots in the community will be able to survive and prosper as the market changes and capital and land becomes available.

Consumer preferences will shift more to shorter commutes, urban environments and greener homes, he said, and smaller builders will be able to adapt more readily to these trends.

“This is a non-traditional manufacturing business. Each lot is different,” Goldberg said. “Smaller companies usually adjust to these changes more effectively.”

Photos by Morris Semiatin


 

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