Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

HIT HARD by pandemic , restaurant­s lack economic punch of past.

June closings rise 20.7% compared with May, data shows

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Vince Golle and Reade Pickert of Bloomberg News and by Josh Boak of The Associated Press.

U.S. sales of previously owned homes rose in June for the first time in four months as the economy reopened more broadly from coronaviru­s-related shutdowns and buyers took advantage of record-low mortgage rates.

Closing transactio­ns jumped 20.7% from May to an annualized pace of 4.72 million, data from the National

Associatio­n of Realtors showed Wednesday. Despite the sharp gain, purchases are still down 11.3% from a year ago, when homes had sold at an annual pace of 5.32 million.

“The housing market is hot. Red hot,” Lawrence Yun, the associatio­n’s chief economist, said on a call with reporters. Homebuyers are favoring smaller towns and suburbs, perhaps because people are looking for a larger-sized home to accommodat­e working from home, Yun said.

The figures show a rebound in the housing market that is providing a source of support for the economy. At the same time, the pace of sales may be difficult to sustain at near pre-pandemic levels given millions of job losses and more-recent rollbacks of reopening plans in states experienci­ng pickups in coronaviru­s cases.

“Overall, the housing market is one of the segments of the economy that is in a V-shaped type recovery,” said Ryan Sweet, head of monetary policy research at Moody’s Analytics Inc. There are “a couple reasons behind that. Mortgage rates are near record lows, and the recession is impacting lowerincom­e households, renters, much more than high-income households.”

Purchases of previously

owned single-family homes jumped 19.9%, while sales of condominiu­ms rose 29.4%, the associatio­n said. Condominiu­ms are currently about 9% of all sales, down from a typical 12% share. Yun said the smaller share of condominiu­ms could reflect people desiring a single-family property because of the virus or that the home has become not only a place to live but an office.

Properties in June typically remained on the market for 24 days, down from 27 days in the same month last year. Also, 62% of the homes sold in June were on the market for less than a month.

Inventory fell 18.2% from a year ago to 1.57 million, marking the 13th-straight monthly decline on a year-over-year basis. The number of homes for sale would last four months at the current sales pace. Anything below five months is seen as a tight market.

If the number of listings last month was similar to that of June 2019, “we would have easily sold those inventory. So, home sales are being constraine­d due to the lack of inventory,” Yun said. “We are facing an acute

inventory shortage, especially at the lower price points.”

“Buyers are out in force, but new listings remain the key to housing’s recovery,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com. “More sellers are needed before we’ll see yearover-year gains in home sales.”

The limited supply is forcing up prices just when many Americans are struggling with financial uncertaint­y because of the recession.

The group’s report showed the median home price increased 3.5% from a year earlier to a record $295,300.

Existing-home sales increased in all four U.S. regions in June, led by a 31.9% jump in the West and a 26% rise in the South. Purchases also rose 11.1% in the Midwest and 4.3% in the Northeast.

Previously owned home sales account for about 90% 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 June data will be released Friday.

 ?? (AP) ?? A sale sign stands in front of a home in Monroe, Wash., outside of Seattle, in this April file photo. Americans stepped up their home purchases in June.
(AP) A sale sign stands in front of a home in Monroe, Wash., outside of Seattle, in this April file photo. Americans stepped up their home purchases in June.

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