Los Angeles Times

New home sales drop in August

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One month after surging to their highest level in nearly nine years, sales of new homes nationwide retreated in August, with the exception the West, the Commerce Department reported Monday.

Sales of newly built houses in the West jumped 8% from a month earlier, while nationwide sales dropped 7.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 609,000 units. That followed a surge in sales in July, when they jumped 13.8% to a rate of 659,000, the fastest pace since October 2007.

The median price of a new home sold in August was $284,000, down 3.1% from July and down 5.3% from a year earlier.

Sales had been expected to slow after the July surge; new home data can fluctuate widely from month to month because of a small sample size.

Overall, the new-home market is on the upswing, though sales aren’t back to historical­ly normal levels, said Ralph B. McLaughlin, chief economist with real estate firm Trulia.

Sales per 1,000 U.S. households clocked in at just 4.6 in August, or 63.4% of the 50-year average, McLaughlin said.

“This comparison suggests homebuyers aren’t buying new homes at the rates older generation­s did,” he said in a statement.

Sales of existing homes slipped 0.9% in August to an annual rate of 5.33 million units.

One problem weighing on the industry is a lack of inventory available for sale. At the August sales pace, it would take 4.6 months to exhaust the supply of new homes on the market. That’s up from a 4.2-month supply in July but still below historic levels. Even though constructi­on of new homes has accelerate­d for most of this year, builders would like to boost constructi­on even more, but they face rising costs for land and labor.

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