Builders won't be able to keep up with demand. People 48 and up, they have money and they are looking for things to do with it.
Builders won't be able to keep up with demand.
Builders will keep building as long as they can keep getting these prices. But I think there's a glut developing clearly in some markets and that clearly will put downward pressure on prices.
Builders will face more challenges with density and land prices, and with all these public builders, they can go out and scour the countryside for ideas from other cities. Smaller builders will follow suit. If they are affordable, why would people not buy them?
Builders who are focusing on an older clientele get it, but even so, a lot of them still don't get it and are building in traditional institutional kinds of ways. They're hurting themselves.
Builders were able to build and so they were out there doing it, and the seasonal adjustment process pumped it up.
Builders told me they could have sold 50 percent more homes if the county let them do so.
Builders should be able to use standards that work best for specific projects.
Builders need to conduct a top-to-bottom review of their businesses, identify strengths and weaknesses, reevaluate their risk tolerance and determine how they can improve their operations.
Builders live on cash flow. If you were to stop their cash flow coming in for a period of 90 days, they stand to lose houses, cars and businesses.