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Politics And Prose > The Economist > Housing Sales Down in US


Title: Housing Sales Down in US
Description: Down!


Deltasix - August 23, 2006 10:37 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
New sign of US housing slowdown

Sales of existing US homes have fallen to their lowest level since the start of 2004, in a fresh sign that the once red-hot housing market is cooling down.

Sales of previously-owned homes were down 4% in July from a month before, a bigger fall than analysts had expected.

Successive interest rate rises have taken the heat out of the market, with sales of new homes also falling.

Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said recently he believed the market was headed for a "soft landing".

Budget pressures

The housing boom helped drive the US economy forward over the past few years.

But two years of interest rate rises - which have seen rates increase to 5.25% - have put growing pressure on household incomes.

A senior Fed official said on Tuesday that higher inflation was more of a risk than lower growth.

Economists interpreted the remarks as a signal that rates may yet rise further after a pause earlier this month.

The average price of homes sold last month rose 0.9% from a year ago to $230,000, according to figures from the National Association of Realtors (NAR), the smallest year-on-year increase since 1995.

New home sales fell 3% in June and experts believe sales could be down by about 10% for the year as a whole.

Adjustment

The NAR said the market was partly undergoing a correction following excessive price rises but that the softening of the economy was also affecting sales activity in parts of the country.

"What we are experiencing right now is an inventory and price adjustment," said its chief economist David Lereah.

"The housing market is in transition and there is pain in that transition."

The US economy slowed significantly in the second quarter of the year, with output rising at an annualised rate of 2.5% compared with 5.6% in the previous quarter.

The latest figures raised the question of "whether there is a soft or a hard landing of the economy", said Peter Cardillo, an equity analyst with investment brokers SW Bach.

Indian Guy - August 24, 2006 06:36 AM (GMT)
Nice find.

I live in California, and house prices are ridiculous right now. They are selling for so much, but people have started to lower prices a bit because nobody is taking them.

Right now I'm in Michigan, and home prices haven't gotten higher since the last time I was here (4 years ago). I just saw a house today, 4 bedroom, 4 bathroom, 3,500 sq. ft - Lake front, that's going for $220,000.

$500,000 won't get a home aside the freeway in CA. :(

Kevin Beckman - August 28, 2006 05:46 PM (GMT)
Michigan Represent!

Anyways yeah the east coast is especially horrible with real estate prices.

I'm not really suprised sales have gone down.

RancerDS - August 29, 2006 03:58 PM (GMT)
They are talking about how Oklahoma was not suffering as bad on this front. Yet the houses have been staying on real-estate market longer. It seems this state is just a little slow to react to nation-wide economical trends... not to mention that it probably isn't as affected to a large degree as other areas.

A poker bud is in real-estate and apparently struggling the last few months. To top it all off, Oklahoma has it's very own income tax (state-level). Whoooopie! :) And the sales taxes here in this town are like 9.35%. That's higher than Dallas and most of it's surburbs, if not all.




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