Friday, April 26, 2024 | Shawwal 16, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
26°C / 26°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

US new home sales rise in June, but trend softening

1069760
1069760
minus
plus

WASHINGTON: New US single-family home sales increased in June as purchases in the West surged to a near 10-year high, but downward revisions to the sales pace for the prior three months pointed to a housing market that is struggling to gain momentum.


New home sales slowed in the second quarter compared to the first three months of the year. The housing market is being hampered by a dire shortage of properties, which is keeping home prices elevated and sidelining first-time buyers.


“We need the housing market to be strong if the economy is to accelerate,” said Joel Naroff, Chief Economist at Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pennsylvania. “The housing market has been wandering around for most of 2017 and it isn’t clear if that pattern will change anytime soon.”


The Commerce Department said on Wednesday new home sales gained 0.8 per cent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 610,000 units last month. The sales pace for March, April and May was revised lower.


New single-family homes sales in the West soared 12.5 per cent to their highest level since July 2007. They jumped 10.0 per cent in the Midwest, but fell 6.1 per cent in the South. Sales were unchanged in the Northeast.


New home sales, which constitute 10 per cent of overall home sales, rose 9.1 per cent on a year-on-year basis. They remain less than half of what they were at the peak of the housing market bubble in 2005.


The slowdown in sales in the second quarter suggests housing was likely a drag on gross domestic product during that period. The sector added almost half a percentage point to the economy’s annualized 1.4 per cent growth pace in the first quarter.


The Atlanta Federal Reserve is forecasting GDP rising at a 2.5 per cent pace in the second quarter. The government will publish its advance estimate for second-quarter GDP on Friday.


The cool-off in housing reflects constraints on supply, rather than demand, amid a strong labour market, which is near full employment. Builders are struggling to keep up with demand amid rising lumber costs and shortages of labour and land.


Housing starts are running at a 1.22 million-unit pace. That is below their historic average of 1.5 million units, a rate realtors say would eliminate the housing shortage.


About 70 per cent of new homes sold in June were either yet to be built or under construction, highlighting the demand and supply imbalance.


“And this says nothing of the fact that because these homes aren’t finished, they won’t be move-in ready for months, meaning owners of existing homes that are moving into these new homes will not be in much rush to list their current home and sell to someone else,” said Svenja Gudell, Chief Economist at Zillow.


A report on Monday showed sales of previously owned homes fell 1.8 per cent in June.


The PHLX index of housing stocks fell on the new home sales report. Shares in the nation’s largest homebuilder, DR Horton, declined 1.6 per cent and Lennar Corp slipped 0.3 per cent. Pultegroup stock fell 0.4 per cent.


With homebuilder confidence dropping to an eight-month low in July, the supply of houses is unlikely to improve. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon