That the Warren Buffett/ Charlie Munger-led firm would go to the housing sector for names in which to place money seems odd given the steady rise in interest rates —including the 30-Year fixed mortgage rate. The old pros in Omaha surely have greater wisdom than the rest of us but let’s examine the positions.
Housing Stocks
Lennar
LEN
BRK.B
In mid-July, Raymond James upgraded its rating on the stock from “market perform” to “outperform.” In June, the analysts at Deutsche Bank issued a “sell” rating on Lennar with a price target of $105.
The daily price chart looks like this:
The stock peaked in July at just above $132.50 and has fallen quickly to the current $117.05. The drop below the 50-day moving average (the red line) is accompanied by heavy volume as you can see by the red-ish bar below prices. The relative strength index (RSI, below the price chart) appears about to drop into the “oversold” level.
NVR – NVR, Inc. Stock Price and Quote (finviz.com)
NVR’s is the third residential construction addition to the Berkshire Hathaway portfolio. It’s trading with a price-to-book ratio of 4.73 and the price-earnings ratio sits at 12.85. These metrics make it a little less of a value stock than the above two adds. Earnings are up by 53% this year and up by 28.30% over the past 5 years. NVR does not pay a dividend, another indicator of “not quite a value stock.”
The daily price chart is here:
It’s also dropped to below the 50-day moving average although the volume does not seem to be heavy.
The SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF is the benchmark for the sector. Here’s the daily price chart:
The uptrend from the beginning of the year for this sector is over. After hitting a peak in July of $85, the ETF has dropped back to $79.38 and now trades below its 50-day moving average.
The 30-Year fixed mortgage rate may have something to do with the slide in the housing stocks — it’s up at 7.09%. That’s higher than it’s been for more than 20 years.
Note that the CBOE 10-Year Treasury yield is now back up to its 2022 high just under 4.40% (the point-and-figure chart below shows basis points):
It’s certain that Berkshire Hathaway is looking at the long-term. Still, in the past, the firm has occasionally taken positions and then unloaded them before a year is up. We’ll see.
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