Tag Archives: xhb

Declining Housing Starts Equals Big Profits

Since peaking at 2,111 on April 20, 2016, the S&P 500 has rolled over. The broad market index now sits at 2,050 – nearly 3% lower in just a couple of weeks. The S&P 500 chart below has a distinctly negative look to it. Click to enlarge As the S&P 500 peaked, the moving average convergence divergence (MACD) momentum indicator showed significant negative divergence. This is a strong warning sign that the current rally is exhibiting exhaustion and could be vulnerable to a reversal. The S&P is well-below its 9-day exponential moving average (EMA) of 2,068, which means the market could test its 50-day moving average at 2,035. But given recent negative readings on a host of economic reports here and around the globe, there’s a real possibility that a much deeper move is in the cards. And should the market pass through the 2,035 level, there is no real support until roughly 1,980. That’s another 3.4% from current levels. For this reason, traders should use any strength in the market to unload long positions, while also adding short positions. One possible short position is the S&P Homebuilders Fund (NYSE: XHB ) You see, the homebuilding sector is vulnerable here to a sharp pullback. Below is a chart of XHB… Click to enlarge This chart looks eerily similar to the S&P 500 chart. It shows that XHB has also fallen below its 9-day EMA, while also sitting at its 50-day moving average. This means the $34 level effectively becomes XHB’s new level of resistance. This provides an excellent opportunity to short XHB. With the close proximity to the new resistance level at $34, we can quickly exit the position if resistance with a small loss if resistance breaks. On the other hand, if the nine-day resistance holds, XHB should fall to one of the lower support lines at about $31.20 or as low as $30.20. Now, we hold that the $30.20 price target best aligns with our expectation of a moderate pullback (~3.4%) in the S&P 500. This make $30.20 a reasonable target over the next few weeks. XHB closed at $33.29 today. Now, by taking a short position at this level, we’re risking $0.54 per share if the stock moves higher. Conversely, we stand to pocket $3.00 per share if we’re right and XHB moves lower. That gives us a good risk/reward setup. But we can mitigate our risk even further by purchasing put options on XHB instead of shorting the stock. Here’s how… Let’s assume you’d typically short 500 shares of a recommended stock. At today’s price of $33.29, you’d pony up about $16,650 to short the shares. Now, most investors are willing to absorb a 10% drawdown on shorted stocks should the stock run the wrong direction. This would limit your loss to $1,665 before you exited the position. But, because $1,665 is the most you’re willing to risk, you could instead use the $1,650 to buy the puts. But let’s reduce our risk even further by cutting our maximum loss in half… The XHB June $34 puts closed Thursday at $1.15. With $825, you can purchase seven put options on XHB. Since each option contract covers 100 shares, that gives you control of 700 shares of XHB – versus the 500 shares you would have shorted with the $16,665. You’ve reduced the risk on this trade, while also increasing the potential reward by controlling more shares. This is the right way to speculate with puts. Of course, if we’re wrong on this trade, you could lose 100% of the money you used to buy the puts. But it’s far better to lose 100% of $825 than to lose 10% of $16,665. And if we’re right on this trade, you can make more money by owning seven puts than by shorting 500 shares. So, by purchasing puts instead of shorting the shares, we reduce our risk and increase our potential reward. It makes for a more intelligent trade for managing risk/reward. Here’s the trade in a nutshell… Buy the XHB June $34 put options (XHB160610P0003400) up to $1.25. This option closed yesterday at $1.15 when XHB closed around $33.29 per share. You should be able to get into this trade as long as XHB is trading above $33.30 per share by the time you enter your order. If the stock falls and the option moves out of range, or if the option spikes higher as a result of this recommendation, give the trade a day or two to come back into range. Going forward, if XHB falls to our downside target at $30.20 per share, the June $34 puts will be worth at least $3. That’s a 161% gain on the trade. Once the options have double in price, sell half the position. This will eliminate any chance of a losing trade. Then focus on maximizing profits if XHB moves lower. One caveat…. It’s important to remember this is a speculative trade. We’re buying short-term options in anticipation of a stock market pullback. There’s no guarantee the market will fall or that XHB will decline even if the broader market falls. You can lose everything you put into this trade. So, please, limit your risk to less than half of what you would normally be willing to lose on the stock. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Homebuilding ETFs In Focus Following U.S. Home Resale Data

The recent home resale data from National Association of Realtors (“NAR”) indicated that the U.S. homebuilding sector still faces weaknesses. The data showed a 3.4% decline in existing home sales in the U.S. to an annual rate of 5.36 million units in October from 5.55 million units in September. The decline is blamed on the shortage of properties that pushed up prices and discouraged buyers of existing homes. Per NAR, the number of unsold homes for October ebbed 2.3% over the previous month to 2.14 million units. Unsold homes inventory was down 4.5% from the prior year. The tight inventory caused median home price to increase 5.8% from the year-ago level to $219,600, marking the 44th straight month of a year-over-year rise (read: Homebuilder Stocks and ETFs Gain on Solid Data ). Last week, U.S. Commerce Department also revealed disappointing housing starts data for October. Groundbreaking dipped 11% to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 1.06 million units during the month, the lowest level in the past 7 months. The decline was attributed to slowdown in the construction of multi-family homes. Groundbreaking data for the largest housing market segment indicated a 2.4% fall in single-family home projects for October. Much of the decline has been contributed by a 6.9% downfall in groundbreaking activity in the South, the most active region for the homebuilding sector. Meanwhile, housing starts for the multi-family segment slumped 25.1% to the annual pace of 338,000 units. Notably, new single-family home sales in the U.S. tumbled 11.5% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 468,000 units in September from August. This has led to 5.8 months’ supply of new homes in September, the highest since July last year. The U.S. homebuilding sector already faces a major threat from the strong possibility of an interest rate hike by Fed in December. A higher interest rate environment heavily weighs on the affordability of homes. On the other hand, it raises the mortgage rates that could fend off existing homeowners from upgrading to luxury and expensive homes (read: Is it the Right Time for Homebuilder ETFs? ). However, some have predicted that the decline in housing activities during October could be short-lived, particularly when the labor market is improving and the broader market is recovering. Further, industry experts argue that Fed’s lift-off could send a positive signal about the economy and boost consumer confidence. ETFs in Focus The depressing homebuilding reports for October turns our attention to the ETFs tracking the performance of the sector. Although the two major homebuilding ETFs (discussed below) delivered good performance both in the one-month and year-to-date time frames, investors should remain cautious about them given the adverse developments and the threat of an impending rate hike by the Fed (read: Two Homebuilder ETFs & Stocks Set to Soar ). iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (NYSEARCA: ITB ) This most popular homebuilding fund provides a pure play on the home construction sector by tracking the Dow Jones US Select Home Builders Index. It holds a basket of 41 stocks, with double-digit allocation going to both D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI ) and Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN ). The product has amassed more than $2 billion in its asset base and trades in heavy volume of more than 3.7 million shares per day, on average. The ETF charges 43 bps in annual fees, and has added about 2.9% in the past one month and 10.4% in the year-to-date period (as of November 24, 2015). It has a Zacks ETF Rank #2 (Buy) with a High risk outlook. SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF (NYSEARCA: XHB ) XHB follows the S&P Homebuilders Select Industry Index, representing the homebuilding sub-industry portion of the S&P Total Markets Index. The fund holds 36 securities in its basket, with none accounting for more than 3.87% of the assets. It has garnered about $1.9 billion in its asset base and exchanges a heavy volume of roughly 3.4 million shares per day, on average. XHB charges 35 bps in annual fees and returned 0.6% in the last one-month and 6.9% so far this year. It has a Zacks ETF Rank #2 with a High risk outlook. Original Post

Homebuilding On Sustained Growth: ETFs In Focus

After a sizzling summer, the U.S. housing market showed signs of losing some momentum, indicating that the China-led global growth worries might have spoiled the industry’s growth last month. This is especially true as new home construction dropped 3% in August to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.13 million homes, much higher than the market expectation of 1.16 million. Despite the fall, housing starts remained above the one-million-unit mark for the fifth straight month. This suggests that recovery is still on the way and will keep coming. The positive sentiments were driven by growing demand for homes, accelerating job growth, rising wages, affordable mortgage rates, and increasing consumer confidence. Additionally, new applications for building permits, a construction bellwether for the coming months, rebounded last month as it rose 3.5% to an annual rate of 1.17 million after falling 15.5% in July. Another data showed that homebuilder confidence jumped to the highest level since November 2005 as indicated by the National Association of Homebuilders/Wells Fargo Sentiment Index that rose one point in September. The optimism is also reflected in number of homebuilder stocks and ETFs. In particular, the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (NYSEARCA: ITB ) and the SPDR Homebuilders ETF (NYSEARCA: XHB ) gained about 0.8% each on Thursday’s trading session despite the disappointing housing starts data. This was followed by a modest 0.04% gain for the PowerShares Dynamic Building & Construction Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PKB ) . From a year-to-date look, ITB, XHB and PKB have respectively risen 10%, 9.4% and 14.3%, and are easily outpacing the broad sector and broad market funds. XLB lost nearly 10.3% while SPY shed 1.74% in the same time frame. All the three ETFs have a decent Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or “Hold” rating with a High risk outlook. The outperformance in the homebuilding space is likely to continue in the coming months given that the residential and commercial building industry has a solid Zacks Rank in the top 38%. Further, S&P Capital IQ expects homebuilding revenues to increase 15% this year and 11% in the next, thanks to encouraging industry fundamentals and an improving U.S. economy. Investors seeking large profits in a short span could also take a look at the leveraged plays – the ProShares Ultra Homebuilders & Supplies ETF (NYSEARCA: HBU ) and the Direxion Daily Homebuilders & Supplies Bull 3x Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: NAIL ) . HBU provides double exposure while NAIL offers triple exposure to the index of ITB. However, the fund is relatively new in the space and has low trading activity, making it a riskier and a high-cost choice. Link to the original post on Zacks.com Share this article with a colleague