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Builders more confident about the future
If you are a regular reader of this blog, you know we have been cautiously reporting some positive factors that seem to be contributing to a slowly-emerging, or improving, real estate market.
None of these things have been dramatic, but all of them have been positive – things like an improving employment picture, continuing low interest rates, and increases in the number of pending home sales.
Here’s one more thing to add to the list – an optimistic report from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).
The NAHB reported this week that confidence among home builders is on the upswing when it comes to the construction of single-family homes. The NAHB says it is the third consecutive month that builders have reported increased confidence in the future of single-family home construction.
“While builder confidence remains low, the consistent gains registered over the past several months are an indication that pockets of recovery are slowly starting to emerge in scattered housing markets,” said NAHB Chairman Bob Nielsen.
Nielsen had something else to say, also; he noted that new single-family home sales might be even better if lenders were a little freer with their money. Builders and home buyers are both being negatively impacted by tight credit restrictions, he said.
NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe said buyers are still cautious because of the large inventories of foreclosed properties in many markets, and they also worry about continuing high unemployment ands the challenges of selling their existing homes.
Even so, Crowe said, “builders are reporting more inquiries and more interest among potential buyers than they have seen in previous months.”
The area of the country where builders are expressing the biggest boosts in confidence levels? Right here in the South.
New homeowner tax credit may mean tax windfall for builders
Last week, the Congress extended the first time homeowner tax credit. But what wasn’t so obvious about that legislation is that it provides some really big tax breaks for home building companies.
Big builders like Lennar and Pulte could end up with hundreds of millions of dollars in refunds from the U.S. Treasury on taxes they paid as far back as five years, according to the Wall Street Journal. Those refunds are designed to help the companies cope with the big losses they have experienced in the past two years or so.
The tax break will apply to large companies of all kinds. But it may be of particular benefit to the country’s biggest home builders, because they have experienced some really hefty losses as the economy has tanked over the past couple of years.
Some critics say they home builders don’t really need that much help because they have been selling off assets, such as land and unsold inventory, and bargain prices and then hoarding the proceeds. One source estimates that the 10 largest home building companies are sitting on average of $1.2 billion in cash each, quite a lot more than the $616 million cash average they had just a couple of years ago.
Pulte Homes says it may receive more than $450 million in tax refunds; Lennar Homes may get refunds of as much as $300 million.
One benefit to the tax refund news: stock prices for Lennar and other builders went up last week as the legislation was announced.

