Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nation’s pending home sales inch back 0.5 percent in May

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WASHINGTON — Pending home sales in the U.S. decreased modestly in May and have now fallen on an annual basis for the fifth straight month, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors. A larger decline in contract activity in the South offsets gains in the Northeast, Midwest and West.

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, decreased 0.5 percent to 105.9 in May from 106.4 in April and is down on an annual basis 2.2 percent.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the NAR chief, said this year’s spring buying season will go down as one of unmet expectatio­ns.

“Pending home sales underperfo­rmed once again in May, declining for the second straight month and coming in at the second-lowest level over the past year,” Yun said.

“Realtors in most of the country continue to describe their markets as highly competitiv­e and fast moving, but without enough new and existing inventory for sale, activity has essentiall­y stalled,” he said.

The lackluster spring, according to Yun, has primarily been a supply issue and not one of weakening demand.

If the recent slowdown in activity were because buyer interest is waning, price growth would start slowing, inventory would begin rising, and homes would stay on the market longer, he said.

Instead, the underlying closing data in May showed that home price gains are still outpacing income growth, inventory declined on an annual basis for the 36th consecutiv­e month, and listings typically went under contract in just over three weeks.

“With the cost of buying a home getting more expensive, it’s clear the summer months will be a true test for the housing market,” Yun said.

“One encouragin­g sign has been the increase in new-home constructi­on to a 10-year high,” he said. “Several wouldbe buyers this spring were kept out of the market because of supply and affordabil­ity constraint­s. The healthy economy and job market should keep many of them actively looking to buy, and any rise in inventory would certainly help them find a home.”

Yun now forecasts for existing-home sales in 2018 to decrease 0.4 percent to 5.49 million — down from 5.51 million in 2017. The national median existingho­me price is expected to increase around 5.0 percent. In 2017, existing sales increased 1.1 percent, and prices rose 5.7 percent.

REGIONAL BREAKDOWN

The Pending Home Sales Index in the Northeast increased 2.0 percent to 92.4 in May but is still 4.8 percent below a year ago. In the Midwest, the index rose 2.9 percent to 101.4 in May but is still 2.5 percent lower than May 2017. Pending home sales in the South declined 3.5 percent to an index of 122.9 in May (unchanged from a year ago). The index in the West inched forward 0.6 percent in May to 94.7 but is 4.1 percent below a year ago.

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