Vancouver Sun

Sales of previously owned homes hit lowest level since 2010 in U.S.

- VINCE GOLLE and READE PICKERT

U.S. sales of previously owned homes dropped in May by more than forecast to the lowest level since October 2010 as the coronaviru­s pandemic sent demand skidding along with the rest of the economy.

Closing transactio­ns decreased 9.7 per cent from the prior month to an annualized pace of 3.91 million, data from the National Associatio­n of Realtors showed Monday.

The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 4.09 million rate.

Compared with a year ago, purchases were down 26.6 per cent, the biggest annual slide since February 2008.

Even with the decline in contract closings, more recent data have shown the housing market is rebounding and becoming a bright spot for the economy.

Home-purchase loan applicatio­ns have spiked recently in part because of record-low mortgage rates, though millions of job losses and still-lean inventory make it unlikely that sales will soon rival February’s 13-year high.

“Just looking at the housing sector itself, it looks to be a V-shaped recovery,” Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, said on a call with reporters.

“For the rest of the economy, it may not be a V-shape.”

The group’s report showed the median home price increased 2.3 per cent from a year earlier to US$284,600.

Inventory rose 6.2 per cent from a month earlier to 1.55 million but fell 18.8 per cent from a year ago.

The number of homes for sale would last 4.8 months at the current sales pace. Anything below five months is seen as a tight market.

Existing home sales dropped in all four U.S. regions in May, including an 11.1-per-cent slump in the West and an eight-per-cent decrease in the South. Closings also fell 10 per cent in the Midwest and 13 per cent in the Northeast.

The biggest hit to the housing market is centred around the condominiu­m and co-op market as sales slumped 12.8 per cent in May to an annualized 340,000 rate.

Those purchases are down almost 25 per cent from a year earlier.

The drop in single-family home sales was more moderate — 9.4 per cent from April — to a 3.57 million pace.

“There could be a permanent change about the preference for the suburbs and single-family homes not only because of during this pandemic period but more importantl­y the permanent change” to work from home, Yun said.

Previously owned home sales account for about 90 per cent of U.S. transactio­ns and are calculated when a contract closes.

New-home sales, which make up the remainder, are based on contract signings and May data will be released Tuesday.

Other recent data have shown the residentia­l real estate market is beginning to rebound.

The Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n’s weekly measure of home-purchase loan applicatio­ns is currently at an 11-year high. June data from the National Associatio­n of Home Builders and Wells Fargo showed builder sentiment jumped by a record 21 points.

 ?? KEITH SRaKOCIC/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? While recent data have shown the U.S. housing market is rebounding, existing home sales dropped in all four U.S. regions in May.
KEITH SRaKOCIC/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES While recent data have shown the U.S. housing market is rebounding, existing home sales dropped in all four U.S. regions in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada