The Housing Hiccup: 3 Stocks to Sell as the Real Estate Market Cools

The Housing Hiccup: 3 Stocks to Sell as the Real Estate Market Cools

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Real estate is in a complicated position right now. On the one hand, it appears that interest rates have already peaked for this cycle and are set to start declining in the coming months.

In fact, the Federal Reserve has suggested that there could be multiple rate cuts in 2024, depending on how the economy and inflation evolve this year. I recently highlighted three real estate stocks that should benefit if and when interest rates go down.

On the other hand, the Federal Reserve is likely to cut interest rates for good reason. The economy may be losing steam. Credit quality metrics are slipping as consumers are facing economic strain. Globally, economies such as China are really struggling right now. And sectors such as travel and consumer discretionary that had been booming are now weakening dramatically.

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There is a concept of long and variable lags in monetary policy; it can take many months between when the Fed raises rates and when it causes an impact on the economy. The Fed’s aggressive rate hike campaign is likely to cause major economic distress for parts of the economy in 2024. These housing market stocks appear to be in grave danger if the economy really slips later this year.

Hovnanian Enterprises (HOV)

A photo of a man with a clipboard in front of a home under construction.
A photo of a man with a clipboard in front of a home under construction.

Source: Shutterstock.com

At first glance, Hovnanian Enterprises (NYSE:HOV) looks like a tremendous value stock. This small homebuilder is trading at five times trailing earnings, 0.3x revenues, and less than 4x enterprise value to free cash flow (EV/FCF).

The company’s earnings have positively skyrocketed over the past few years as consumers rushed to buy new houses from 2020 onward. Hovnanian, as a small and highly leveraged firm, had a ton of torque to raise new home prices. Indeed, HOV stock exploded from $20 at the start of 2020 to $160 per share today. Even so, shares still look dirt cheap, right?

The problem is, however, that these earnings are likely unsustainable. Hovnanian has historically had a decidedly mixed record as a homebuilder; the firm lost money outright in 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2019. In 2017 alone, the company lost more than $56 per share in earnings. That’s not a misprint.

It’s easy for investors to look at Hovnanian during the recent housing boom, see the $30 per share or so in annual earnings, slap a high P/E multiple on it, and think HOV stock should double or triple. However, Hovnanian historically has wildly uneven earnings and it has a large debt load. If the more challenging housing market causes Hovnanian’s sales to slow, the company could see its earnings dry up and the share price plunge back toward where it was prior to the onset of the pandemic.