U.S. pending home sales drop in November; Omicron poses risk - NAR
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[December 30, 2021] (Reuters)
- Contracts to buy U.S. previously owned
homes fell unexpectedly in November as limited housing stock and lofty
prices crimped activity, and the explosion of new coronavirus cases from
the fast-spreading Omicron variant poses a risk to the housing market
headed into 2022, a trade group said on Wednesday.
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) said its Pending Home Sales
Index, based on signed contracts, fell 2.2% last month to 122.4. Pending
home sales were lower in all four regions.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast contracts, which typically
become final sales after a month or two, would rise 0.5% in November.
Pending home sales dropped 2.7% in November on a year-on-year basis.
Limited inventory has led to double-digit growth in home prices.
There was less pending home sales action this time around, which I
would ascribe to low housing supply, but also to buyers being hesitant
about home prices," said Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist. "While I
expect neither a price reduction, nor another year of record-pace price
gains, the market will see more inventory in 2022 and that will help
some consumers with affordability."
Demand for housing shot up early in the coronavirus pandemic as
Americans decamped from city centers to suburbs and other, less densely
populated areas in a hunt for larger homes to accommodate online
schooling and working from home.
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A home with a sign indicating that it is under contract to be sold
is seen in a neighborhood of downtown Washington, October 27, 2009.
REUTERS/Jim Bourg
The market cooled off in the first half of the year as limited inventory lifted
prices beyond the reach of many would-be buyers. Also the rollout of vaccines
fueled optimism that people would be able to return to work in offices in urban
areas and other business districts.
Activity has picked up again in recent months, however. The combined annual
sales rate of new and existing U.S. homes reached 7.2 million units in November,
the highest since January.
Now, though, new variants of COVID-19 - first Delta and now Omicron - have swept
across the country, forcing employers to retreat again on large-scale
return-to-office plans. The U.S. coronavirus caseload has shot to a record in
the last week, according to a Reuters tally, surpassing the previous peak set
early this year.
NAR's Yun said Omicron, the highly transmissible variant seen driving the latest
surge in infections, poses a risk to the housing market's performance, as buyers
and sellers are sidelined, and home construction is delayed.
(Reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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