Signs of recovery? U.S. business activity and home sales
surge
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[August 22, 2020] By
Dan Burns
(Reuters) - In signs an economic recovery
may be picking up speed, U.S. home sales rose at a record rate for a
second straight month in July, and purchasing managers in both the
manufacturing and services sectors report business activity has
accelerated at a brisker-than-expected pace this month.
With mortgage rates holding near record lows and a work-from-home trend
apparently enticing many Americans to move further from city centers,
the National Association of Realtors said on Friday sales of existing
homes rose 24.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.86 million
units last month from 4.7 million in June.
Home prices also shot to a record $304,100, and a shortage of inventory
is making competition for houses fierce. The average time on the market
fell to 22 days in July, a record low, from 24 in June, and nearly 70%
sold in less than a month.
Combined with June's 20.2% gain, home sales have mushroomed by nearly
50% in two months to fully retrace the cratering in residential real
estate activity in the spring after the COVID-19 pandemic started
spreading across the country. July's sales rate was the fastest since
December 2006, when the country was in the latter stages of the
sub-prime mortgage housing boom.
“The housing market is well past the recovery phase and is now booming
with higher home sales compared to the pre-pandemic days,” said Lawrence
Yun, NAR’s chief economist. “With the sizable shift in remote work,
current homeowners are looking for larger homes and this will lead to a
secondary level of demand even into 2021.”
Graphic: Existing home sales https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/dgkvllwbbvb/ehs.png
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast sales rising 14.7% to a rate
of 5.38 million units in July. Existing home sales, which make up about
85% of U.S. home sales, rose in all four regions and were up 8.7%
nationally from a year earlier.
The 30-year fixed mortgage rate is at an average of 2.99%, hovering near
levels last seen in the early 1970s, according to data from mortgage
finance agency Freddie Mac. Data earlier this week showed homebuilding
accelerating by the most in nearly four years in July.
Housing has been a bright spot in the economy even as other sectors
suffer amid widespread coronavirus infections that have slowed commerce
and kept unemployment high. More than 28 million people were collecting
jobless benefits under all programs at the end of July.
The pandemic tipped the economy into recession in February, ending a
record-long expansion that had brought U.S. unemployment to a 50-year
low.
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A home for sale is seen in Santa Monica, California, U.S., March 21,
2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson - RC152A05C460/File Photo
BACK TO BUSINESS?
Meanwhile, a purchasing managers' survey showed U.S. business activity snapped
back to the highest since early 2019 in August as companies in both the
manufacturing and services sectors saw a resurgence in new orders even as new
COVID-19 cases remain stubbornly high across the country.
Data firm IHS Markit said its flash U.S. Composite PMI Index rose to a reading
of 54.7 this month - the highest since February 2019 - from 50.3 in July. Its
flash - or preliminary - indicator for the manufacturing sector stood at its
highest since January 2019 and for the services sector it was the highest since
March 2019.
A reading above 50 indicates growth in private sector output.
Graphic: Markit PMI https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/qmyvmaobavr/markit.png
"Driving the overall upturn in output was stronger client demand," Markit said
in its report. "Total new business rose for the first time since February and at
a solid rate. Manufacturing firms registered a steeper expansion in new order
inflows than in July, while service providers signaled a renewed increase in
sales."
The survey's flash composite new orders index climbed to 54 in August - the
highest since March 2019 - from a final reading of 49.7 in July. Foreign sales
increased at the fastest rate since September 2014, it said, as more non-U.S.
markets reopened their economies.
The improvement in the PMI and home sales data comes even as U.S. coronavirus
infections continue to climb, and some authorities in the hard-hit South and
West regions this summer have been forced to either shut down businesses again
or pause reopenings. As of Aug. 20, more than 5.5 million U.S. cases
cumulatively had been recorded since the pandemic began, according to a Reuters
tally, up from around 4.6 million at the end of July.
The unexpectedly sharp increases in Markit's indexes and home sales continue a
pattern of choppy U.S. economic data that paint a picture of a fitful recovery
from the COVID-19 recession, with pockets of both strength and weakness dotted
across disparate portions of the economy and regions.
On Thursday, for instance, the U.S. Labor Department reported that new claims
for unemployment benefits shot back above the 1 million mark last week.
Meanwhile, earlier in the week the government reported residential construction
had accelerated by the most since October 2016 last month.
(Reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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