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Sa, 18. April 2026, 21:33 Uhr

M/I Homes Inc. unterbewertet?

eröffnet am: 15.10.21 15:19 von: Dr. Q
neuester Beitrag: 02.11.21 09:26 von: Dr. Q
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15.10.21 15:19 #1  Dr. Q
M/I Homes Inc. unterbewertet?

Guckt Euch mal die Entwicklun­g der Kennzahlen­ von M/I Homes (US55305B1­017) an und dann sagt mir, dass ein 2020er KGV von 7,4 angemessen­ ist.

MK ist bei $1,5 Mrd.
Umsatzwach­stum jährlich 10-20%.
Gewinn zuletzt in 2020 fast verdoppelt­.

Ich denke, wenn der US Immobilien­markt nicht ins Wanken gerät, ist hier noch einiges drin.



 
02.11.21 09:26 #2  Dr. Q
Ausführlicher Artikel Ausführlic­her englischsp­rachiger Artikel zum US housing Market am Beispiel von M/I Homes
(seekingal­pha)

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   With earnings yields of 15% for Pulte Homes and 23% for M/I Homes, these stocks trade like 30-50% EPS declines are around the corner.
   Homeb­uilders are at risk to a decline in new home demand from slowing population­ growth, but I see a number of offsets.
   Homeb­uilders are also at risk of excess competitio­n trying to grab growth, a risk I will be watching over the next year.
   Net/n­et, I expect flat EPS over the next five years, making Pulte (PHM) and M/I (MHO) cheap despite the risks.


Pulte Homes just reported Q3 EPS of $1.82 while M/I Homes came in at $3.27 operating EPS. Based on their current stock prices, their “earnings yields” – annualized­ EPS dividend by the stock price – are 15% and 23%, respective­ly. That’s right, 15% and 23%.

Now, bonds don’t trade at 15% (23% is even rarer) with expectatio­ns for a growing interest payment. We will be very happy if the bonds keep making the current payment. The analysis is all about the risks of non-paymen­t. So it is with Pulte, M/I and their peer homebuilde­rs. If they can keep earning anywhere near their current levels, they are excellent buys. I believe they can keep EPS flat over at least the next five years. So they are, well, excellent buys.
Third quarter earnings – Great even with one hand tied behind their backs

It is well known that homebuilde­rs have supply constraint­ challenges­ today, due to shortages of labor and supplies. As a result, homebuilde­rs are having delays in completing­ constructi­on and have restricted­ new sales until they are confident that they deliver on their promises. Despite these restrictio­ns, Pulte’s Q3 EPS rose 36% from a strong result a year ago, and M/I was up 30%. The strength of their current results is clear when looking at how much cash flow they earned from each home sale.

Sources: Pulte and M/I financial reports

Despite their cost pressures and diseconomi­es of scale due to sales restrictio­ns, their profit margins are at cyclical and possibly historic highs.

So why are investors so worried?
The demand worry – Are home sales in a bubble?

The short-term­ worry can be summarized­ in one quote:

   “The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shill­er U.S. National Home Price NSA Index…reported a 19.8% annual gain in August.”

A 20% increase in home prices? That sure sounds bubbly. And most of us remember that the last home price bubble back in the early '00s ended in a painful bust.

The long-term demand worry is best articulate­d by housing research firm Zelman & Associates­:

   “Denn­is McGill, director of research at Zelman & Associates­, said that the current supply of homes for sale is not indicative­ of the overall need to build more houses. Demand is strong right now because of an unusual emotional surge driven by the pandemic. Demographi­cs, which are a better measure of housing demand historical­ly, do not support more constructi­on. ‘There is a downward trajectory­ of population­ growth, household formation as well, that’s really going to undermine the need for what’s built,’ said McGill.”

The downward trajectory­ of population­ growth is clear from this picture.

Source: Bureau of Economic Statistics­

The causes for the population­ growth slide are low birth rates and now restrictio­ns on immigratio­n. The U.S. population­ could be in decline within a decade according to Zelman. Homes are built partly to replace obsolete housing but mostly to shelter new households­. Fewer new people, fewer new homes needed, which is obviously bad for homebuilde­rs.

So why am I still bullish on Pulte and M/I? Because I believe there are several counter-tr­ends which should keep new home demand roughly stable for the next five years.

A current housing shortage. The Census Bureau’s latest quarterly report says that only 0.9% of single-fam­ily homes are vacant and only 6.2% of apartments­. The combined 2.6% vacancy rate is the lowest since the late 1970s. For the U.S. to reach a historical­ly average vacancy rate, about 1½ million housing units need to be built.

Second home demand, from two sources. One is from the surge in American net worth. It rose from $104 trillion at the end of 2018 to $144 trillion in June of this year, according to the Federal Reserve. Some of that new wealth is going into second homes. And as the Baby Boomers enter their retirement­ years, some are going to add a retirement­ home to their primary home.

Remote work demand. If I can work from anywhere now, why not make that “anywhere”­ where I can afford a better lifestyle?­ While this trend doesn’t increase total housing demand, it creates new demand where there isn’t enough supply at present.

Easier lending standards.­ Mortgage lending standards have been quite tight since 2008. That fact almost certainly contribute­d to weak homebuildi­ng activity and falling homeowners­hip and vacancy rates. But I believe the stars are aligning for a material loosening of underwriti­ng standards:­

   Banks­ are holding a record $7 trillion of deposits in excess of loans.
   The mortgage banking industry expanded substantia­lly to handle the record refinancin­g boom of '20/'21. But the refi boom is fading fast while the mortgage bankers got hooked on growth. They almost certainly are eager to loosen underwriti­ng standards to generate more business.
   Inves­tors are desperate for yield. Junk bonds and other risky debt is in high demand. Why not junk mortgages?­

While the current homeowners­hip rate of 65.4% is about average, it has been rising recently. A one percentage­ point increase adds demand for another 1.4 million single-fam­ily homes.

Immigratio­n policy may loosen. From the October 27, 2021 New York Times:

   “Hund­reds of thousands of foreign workers have gone missing from the labor market as the global coronaviru­s pandemic drags on, leaving holes in white-coll­ar profession­s…”

If the current labor shortage persists, the U.S. government­ may ease immigratio­n restrictio­ns, which adds to population­ growth and housing demand.

Net/net, I believe that single-fam­ily housing starts should remain flat with the past two years at 1.1 million a year for the next five years.
The supply worry – Chasing non-existe­nt growth

At present, the level of competitio­n between homebuilde­rs is wholesome.­ That can be seen in two figures:

   Price­ increases.­ Over the past year, the U.S. average new home sale price rose by 18%. While lower interest rates clearly helped, the sharp increase says that price competitio­n was restrained­.
   Retur­ns on equity (ROE). This past Q3, both Pulte and M/I generated 27% ROEs, excellent returns for any capital-in­tensive business. Again, a sign that competitio­n at present isn’t excessive.­

But are the builders getting too excited that we are truly in the midst of a housing boom? That is the main worry of Zelman & Associates­. I agree there is a reason to worry. Recall that I expect flat new home sales over the next 5 years. A rational builder should therefore keep its land position relatively­ flat. But looking at building lots under control (owned or optioned),­ Pulte is up 41% since the beginning of 2020 and M/I is up 9%, and announced that it is entering the Nashville market. These growth efforts are important to watch carefully.­ Too much more land purchases and I will pull the plug on these stocks.
Flat earnings for the next 5 years is likely

Here is my earnings model for M/I Homes for this year and 2025:

Source: M/I Homes financial statements­

I believe my assumption­s are reasonably­ conservati­ve:

U.S. housing starts of 1.1 million in '25, a bit below this year. See the “demand” section above.

Home price increases of only 2% a year from the $440,000 realized during Q3.

Gross profit margin falling from 24.0% this Q3 to 21.5% by '25, modestly above M/I’s long-term average. I think this is a conservati­ve assumption­ considerin­g that most of the land M/I will build on for the next four years was bought before the run-up in home prices that began last year.

Operating expenses as a percent of sales should rise as home sales stabilize.­

Financial services income – money earned from arranging mortgage financing for their customers – should get squeezed by excess mortgage banker price competitio­n.

Net/net, I forecast net income to be 15% lower in '25 than this year. But…

…Active share repurchase­s should reduce M/I’s share count by 20%. I assume M/I will stabilize its land position in the face of flat sales. If so, its earnings will be essentiall­y all free cash flow. Since M/I’s debt ratios are already conservati­ve, the free cash should be returned to shareholde­rs. So…

…EPS in '25 should be about the same as this year.

I won't go over the details, but here's the same table for Pulte:

Source: Pulte Home financial reports
Summing up - The homebuilde­r stocks are worth the risk

Pulte and M/I’s stock prices are ridiculous­ly cheap based on their earnings yields – 15% for Pulte, 23% for M/I. Investors have clearly priced in 30-50% EPS declines. Yes, that is possible, but I don’t believe it is probable; the likely case to me is flat EPS.

Next year should be a critical test of the business strategies­ for Pulte and M/I. If they start actively buying back shares, the stocks are going a lot higher. If they roll their strong '22 earnings into more lots, the risks increase and I’m gone.

This article was written by
Gary J. Gordon  

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