U.S. home sales drop to 12-year low; price growth cools
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[January 21, 2023] By
Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. existing home sales plunged to a 12-year low
in December, but declining mortgage rates raised cautious hope that the
embattled housing market could be close to finding a floor.
The report from the National Association of Realtors on Friday also
showed the median house price increasing at the slowest pace since early
in the COVID-19 pandemic as sellers in some parts of the country
resorted to offering discounts.
The Federal Reserve's fastest interest rate-hiking cycle since the 1980s
has pushed housing into recession.
"Existing home sales are somewhat lagging," said Conrad DeQuadros,
senior economic advisor at Brean Capital in New York. "The decline in
mortgage rates could help undergird housing activity in the months
ahead."
Existing home sales, which are counted when a contract is closed, fell
1.5% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.02 million units last
month, the lowest level since November 2010. That marked the 11th
straight monthly decline in sales, the longest such stretch since 1999.
Sales dropped in the Northeast, South and Midwest. They were unchanged
in the West. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast home sales
falling to a rate of 3.96 million units.
Home resales, which account for a big chunk of U.S. housing sales,
tumbled 34.0% on a year-on-year basis in December. They fell 17.8% to
5.03 million units in 2022, the lowest annual total since 2014 and the
sharpest annual decline since 2008.
The continued slump in sales, which meant less in broker commissions,
was the latest indication that residential investment probably
contracted in the fourth quarter, the seventh straight quarterly
decline.
This would be the longest such stretch since the collapse of the housing
bubble triggered the Great Recession.
While a survey from the National Association of Home Builders this week
showed confidence among single-family homebuilders improving in January,
morale remained depressed.
Single-family homebuilding rebounded in December, but permits for future
construction dropped to more than a 2-1/2- year low, and outside the
pandemic plunge, they were the lowest since February 2016.
U.S. stocks were trading higher. The dollar rose against a basket of
currencies. U.S. Treasury prices fell.
MORTGAGE RATES RETREATING
The worst of the housing market rout is, however, probably behind. The
30-year fixed mortgage rate retreated to an average 6.15% this week, the
lowest level since mid-September, according to data from mortgage
finance agency Freddie Mac.
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A "For Rent, For Sale" sign is seen
outside of a home in Washington, U.S., July 7, 2022. REUTERS/Sarah
Silbiger
The rate was down from 6.33% in the prior week and has declined from
an average of 7.08% early in the fourth quarter, which was the
highest since 2002. It, however, remains well above the 3.56%
average during the same period last year.
The median existing house price increased 2.3% from a year earlier
to $366,900 in December. It was still the highest median house price
for any December. Nevertheless, the smallest price gain since May
2020, together with the pullback in mortgage rates, could help to
improve affordability down the road, though much would depend on
supply.
"Markets in roughly half of the country are likely to offer
potential buyers discounted prices compared to last year," said
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist.
House prices increased 10.2% in 2022, boosted by an acute shortage
of homes for sale. Housing inventory totaled 970,000 units last
year. While that was an increase from the 880,000 units in 2021,
supply was the second lowest on record.
"As demand cools and households settle, the available supply of
homes for sale will likely shrink for the first part of this year,"
said Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial in Charlotte,
North Carolina. "If supply of available homes for sale falls from
here, we should expect median prices to stay elevated, especially
hurting first-time buyers."
In December, there were 970,000 previously owned homes on the
market, down 13.4% from November but up 10.2% from a year ago. At
December's sales pace, it would take 2.9 months to exhaust the
current inventory of existing homes, up from 1.7 months a year ago.
That is considerably lower than the 9.6 months of inventory at the
onset of the 2007-2009 recession.
The absence of a huge inventory overhang means the housing market is
unlikely to experience the dramatic collapse witnessed during the
Great Recession.
A four-to-seven-month supply is viewed as a healthy balance between
supply and demand. Properties typically remained on the market for
26 days last month, up from 24 days in November. Fifty-seven percent
of homes sold in December were on the market for less than a month.
First-time buyers accounted for 31% of sales, up from 30% a year
ago. All-cash sales made up 28% of transactions compared to 23% a
year ago. Distressed sales, foreclosures and short sales were only
1% of sales in December.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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