New York

Investors may have overbuilt US housing stocks as data has yet to match up with the home builder sector’s biggest rally in five years.

The S&P 1500 Homebuilding index of home builder companies has surged 32 per cent this year and hit a decade-high earlier this week. By contrast, the wider S&P Composite 1500 Index has gained less than 9 per cent.

Housing optimists are pinning their bets on strong US job creation, low interest rates, tight housing supply, robust earnings estimates and a lack of recessionary red flags.

Some investors still see opportunities, but others warn the stocks may have run too far. “The sentiment has been quite positive for housing but where they are today, I’m not a buyer of housing stocks. The stocks have run up faster than the data supports and there are better pockets of value in the market,” said Erin Browne, global macro portfolio manager at UBS O’Connor in New York.

Brown cited weakening growth in building permits and new projects, known as housing starts, since the first quarter as well as land and labour constraints.

“While new home sales still look solid, they are still low versus historical levels, given the ongoing shortage of skilled labour and buildable lots which is constraining faster growth,” she said.

Data shows first quarter single-family housing starts grew 6 per cent year-over-year and 8.5 per cent in May. Overall housing starts have risen 1.27 per cent so far this year. This week’s June data is expected to show an 8.3 per cent increase from May.

“Demand overall has been positive for the builders,” according to Will Randow, analyst at Citi, although he questioned whether it was positive enough to support such an outsize gain by the group.

Randow believes the stocks have risen partly on hopes that policy changes by the administration of US President Donald Trump could help boost home sales.

DOUBLE-DIGIT GROWTH Wall Street analysts expect most home builders to report solid double-digit earnings growth, according to Reuters data.

D.R. Horton Inc, whose quarterly profit is seen rising 14 per cent, and PulteGroup, pegged for 15.5 per cent earnings growth, will both report in the last week of July.

But Randow says the 2017 median earnings estimate for 12 housing stocks he covers has barely changed in the last three months.

“Maybe the stocks have gotten ahead of themselves. It doesn’t necessarily mean we’re going to see any sort of correction in housing starts.” Earlier this week, Barclays downgraded four US

home builders, citing a buyer traffic pullback in its June survey that was inconsistent with rising valuations.

Short interest in seven home builders — the four biggest and the three biggest year-to-date gainers — has risen by 20 per cent for 2017, with much of that increase coming in June and July, according to financial analytics firm, S3 Partners.

Of the seven, the biggest recent short-selling increase was in LGI Homes, whose shares are up 46.6 per cent for 2017, followed by NVR Inc, up 51.4 per cent.

And recent trading in SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF has leant toward defensive bets with options positioning implying investors are on guard against a near-term decline.

Still, some investors still see value.

Gary Bradshaw, portfolio manager at Hodges Capital Management in Dallas, likes D.R. Horton and LGI Homes, and expects a home shortage to boost prices.

“Maybe there’s another 20 per cent in these stocks over the next 12 months, assuming that interest rates stay relatively low,” said Bradshaw. “I still think there’s plenty of home buyers and not that many homes.” (Additional reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Megan Davies and Bernadette Baum)