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U.S. Sales of Existing Homes Unchanged, Trailing Estimates

U.S. Sales of Existing Homes Unchanged, Trailing Projections

(Bloomberg) -- Sales of previously owned U.S. homes were unchanged in August, indicating buyers are balking at higher prices and leaving more inventory on the market for the first time in three years, a National Association of Realtors report showed Thursday.

Highlights of Existing-Home Sales (August)

  • Contract closings were unchanged from the prior month at a 5.34m annual rate (est. 5.37m); follows four straight declines
  • Median sales price increased 4.6% y/y to $264,800
  • Inventory of available properties rose 2.7% y/y to 1.92m, which was the first increase in more than three years 

Key Takeaways

Borrowing costs have risen this year and property price gains -- while moderating -- continue to outpace wages amid a persistent shortage of available listings. Those affordability hurdles are especially burdensome for younger prospective buyers looking for their first homes.

Buyers are getting help from a steady job market and healthier finances. While overall consumer confidence remains elevated, the latest University of Michigan report showed Americans see home buying conditions as less favorable than a few years ago.

“There are buyers on the sidelines” ready to re-enter the market, Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, said at a press briefing accompanying the report. “The housing market can turn for the better" as long as inventory continues to rise, he said.

Homebuilding also is struggling to pick up steam, government data showed Wednesday. While housing starts rose, permits -- a proxy for future construction -- fell to the slowest pace since May 2017, with single-family authorizations dropping the most in seven years.

Economist’s View

“We’re seeing buyers be really reluctant and shying away from making a purchase commitment right away,” said Cheryl Young, a senior economist at real-estate data provider Trulia in San Francisco. “The tide is maybe turning a bit.”

What Our Economists Say

The failure of existing home sales to rebound in August is another sign that residential investment will slow in the third quarter after subtracting from growth in the first half of the year. In addition to supply constraints, a new trend of weaker demand is emerging, reflected in falling home-buying sentiment. An pop in fourth-quarter home sales will likely be modest and fail to push the overall pace of residential investment for the year into positive territory.

-- Yelena Shulyatyeva and Carl Riccadonna, Bloomberg Economics


Read more for the full report from Bloomberg Economics.

Other Details

  • Purchases rose in two of four regions, led by a 7.6 percent gain in the Northeast; sales also rose in Midwest while declining in the South and West
  • At the current pace, it would take 4.3 months to sell the homes on the market, compared with 4.1 months a year earlier; Realtors group considers less than five months’ supply consistent with a tight market
  • Single-family home sales were unchanged at an annual rate of 4.75 million
  • Purchases of condominium and co-op units unchanged at 590,000 pace
  • Homes stayed on the market for an average 29 days, compared with 30 days a year earlier
  • Existing home sales account for about 90 percent of the market and are calculated when a contract closes. The remainder of the market is made up by new home sales, which are considered a timelier indicator and are tabulated when contracts get signed

--With assistance from Chris Middleton.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Scott Lanman at slanman@bloomberg.net, Jeff Kearns

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.