Housing red flag: Data show increase in cancellations of home purchase
agreements versus a year ago
[June 28, 2025] By
ALEX VEIGA
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The latest sign of trouble in the U.S. housing
market: A pickup in home purchase agreements falling through before
they're finalized.
Some 6% of pending contracts to buy a home were canceled in May, down
from 7% in April, but up from 5% in May last year, according to data
from National Association of Realtors. May is the third consecutive
month with an annual increase in pending home sales cancelations.
A separate analysis of housing data by Redfin found that 14.6% of all
pending sales in May fell out of contract, up from 14% in May last year,
and the highest cancelation percentage for the month of May going back
to at least 2017.
The trend underscores how even home shoppers who manage to ink a deal
with a seller can end up having to back out because of unexpected costs,
changes in their credit, employment or financial status, or a low
appraisal, among other reasons.

“Stock market fluctuations, restrained consumer confidence and broader
economic and geopolitical uncertainties may be leading to
higher-than-normal cancellations rates in recent months,” said Lawrence
Yun, NAR’s chief economist.
The U.S. housing market remains in a sales slump going back to 2022, as
elevated mortgage rates and rising home prices nationally keep pushing
the cost of homeownership well beyond what many would-be homebuyers can
afford.

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A home for sale in Sudbury, Mass., is shown on Sunday, Sept. 22,
2024. (AP Photo/Peter Morgan, File)
 While sales of previously occupied
U.S. homes in May remained at the slowest pace since 2009, pending
U.S. home sales rose 1.8% from the previous month and increased 1.1%
from May last year, NAR said Thursday.
A home sale is listed as pending when the purchase contract has been
signed but the transaction has not closed. There’s usually a month
or two lag between a contract signing and when the sale is
finalized, which makes pending home sales a bellwether for future
completed home sales.
A snapshot by Redfin of pending U.S. home sales for the four weeks
that ended June 22, shows they fell 2.3% from a year earlier, the
biggest drop in three months.
Economists at mortgage buyer Fannie Mae revised their outlook for
existing U.S. home sales this week, citing expectations that the
average rate on a 30-year mortgage will end this year at 6.5%.
Fannie Mae now expects existing U.S. home sales will rise 2% this
year to 4.14 million. The economists' previously forecast the sale
of 4.24 million homes. Still, they project home sales will jump 9.5%
in 2026 on the back of mortgage rates easing to 6.1%.
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