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Home » What Tech and Housing Stocks Have in Common—and Why They’re Both Risky 
Investing

What Tech and Housing Stocks Have in Common—and Why They’re Both Risky 

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 23, 20230 Views0
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Home Depot is a stock that is down in response to an uptick in the 10-year Treasury yield.


Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Tech and home-building stocks have something in common, believe it or not. They’re both ultrasensitive to bond yields, which is why they’ve been sliding—and why they could keep losing.

In less than a month, the
10-year Treasury yield
is up over 4.3% from just below 4%—pushed higher by market fears that the Fed will keep interest rates higher for longer to make sure inflation really is in check.

For home builders, higher interest rates have ultimately translated into higher mortgage rates from lenders, which keeps many prospective buyers out of the game. Last week, for example, the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage climbed to 7.09%, the highest in more than 20 years.

In tech, many companies are valued on the basis that a bulk of their profits will arrive years from now—and higher long-dated bond yields make future profits less valuable. 

Consequently, tech and home-building names are down. The
SPDR S&P Homebuilders exchange-traded fund
(ticker: XHB) is off 6% from its high this year, hit in early August. And the Nasdaq 100, a tech-heavy index of 101 of the largest nonfinancial names on the
Nasdaq Composite,
has lost 7% from this year’s peak in mid-July.  

But as tempting as it might be to buy the dip, now may not be the best entry point for buyers.

Here’s why: It’s quite possible that there are more losses ahead simply because the 10-yield might very well rise even more. It had topped out at roughly 4.2% in October, but found the muster to march on.

Investors have been unloading bonds. Falling prices push yields up. So the selling at this 4%-plus level signifies it is now anybody’s guess when the selling, and the rising yield, will stop.

The Fed could well have a hand in what happens in the short term. If the central bank signals at its annual Jackson Hole summit this week that it plans to keep rates higher for longer, the selling could keep going—and the yield would keep rising.

If that happens, expect home builder stocks to really feel the pain. Bank of America strategists describe the sector as one of the most vulnerable to the 10-year yield.

Home Depot
(HD) is an example. While the home-improvement reported better-than-expected sales and earnings just a week ago, both measures dropped year over year because of weakening housing demand. And management didn’t increase EPS guidance for this year, a decision that reflects the outlook for demand, especially given the level of mortgage rates. 

To go along with the poor outlook, the stock is a risky bet because it’s expensive. Shares trade at 20.8 times analysts’ forward EPS estimates, almost 12% above the
S&P 500’s
aggregate price/earnings multiple, according to FactSet. The stock, for reference, often trades in line with the market when home builders are out of favor. More declines are in store until the economic outlook improves. 

For the stock to flourish from here, “investors will likely need clearer signs the housing market is improving and consumers are taking on more and larger projects,” wrote Joe Feldman, analyst at Telsey Advisory Group. 

Tech, too, has more downside risk. The Nasdaq 100, at around 14800, has dipped below its 50-day moving average of just over 15000. That means there haven’t been many buyers at a recent average of prices, which signifies the market may have lost enough confidence to send the index further south from here.

The index could fall to about 13600, according to Evercore strategists—a support level where buyers propped it up in May, which was part of a double-digit rally for the year. That rally may just need to keep taking a breather right now. 

At some point soon enough, all these stocks should become buys. But let bond yields settle out first. 

Corrections & amplifications: Joe Feldman is an analyst at Telsey Advisory Group. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said Joe Feldan works at Kelsey Advisory Group.

Write to Jacob Sonenshine at [email protected]

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