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Title: Pending Sales of U.S. Existing Homes Fell 7.6% in January
Source: BBG
URL Source: http://bloomberg.com
Published: Mar 4, 2010
Author: Courtney Schlisserman
Post Date: 2010-03-04 10:03:04 by war
Keywords: None
Views: 77
Comments: 1

March 4 (Bloomberg) -- The number of contracts to buy previously owned U.S. homes unexpectedly fell in January, showing the extension of a tax credit is sparking little interest.

The index of purchase agreements, or pending home sales, dropped 7.6 percent after a revised 0.8 percent increase in December, the National Association of Realtors announced in Washington. In November, pending home sales slumped 13.7 percent. Snowstorms in February probably limited contract signings and sales that month as well, the group said.

The renewal of a government incentive to first-time buyers, originally due to expire at the end of November, and its expansion to include current owners has yet to lure buyers back into the market after helping boost sales last year. A lack of jobs and mounting foreclosures have depressed confidence, indicating housing will take time to rebound.

“We’ve seen the worst -- there was a bottom, and we’ve come up off the bottom, but just a bit,” Ken Mayland, president of ClearView Economics LLC in Pepper Pike, Ohio, said before the report.

Economists forecast the gauge would increase 1 percent in January after a previously reported 1 percent gain in December, according to the median of 40 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a drop of 4.2 percent to an increase of 4 percent.

“The abnormally severe and prolonged winter weather, which affected large regions of the U.S., hampered shopping activity in February,” Lawrence Yun, the group’s chief economist, said in a statement. “We will see weak near-term sales followed by a likely surge of existing-home sales in April, May and June.”

Compared with a year earlier, pending sales increased 12 percent.

Jobless Claims

Other reports earlier today showed initial jobless claims fell from a three-month high, while productivity increased in the fourth quarter. First-time claims for unemployment insurance dropped 29,000 last week to 469,000, the Labor Department said.

Productivity, a measure of employee output per hour, rose at a 6.9 percent annual rate in the final three months of last year, the Labor Department also said. Labor costs dropped 5.9 percent, more than anticipated.

The Realtors’ report showed declines in pending sales in all four regions, led by a 13 percent slump in the West. Contract signings fell 8.9 percent in the Midwest, 8.7 percent in the Northeast and 2.1 percent in the South.

Pending home sales are considered a leading indicator because they track contract signings. The Realtors’ existing- home sales report tallies closings, which typically occur a month or two later. The pending sales data go back to January 2001, and the group began publishing the index in March 2005.

Home Sales Fell

Reports last week showed the housing market may be faltering. Sales of previously owned homes unexpectedly dropped 7.2 percent in January after a record decline a month earlier, according to Realtors group’s report Feb. 26. New-home sales slumped to an all-time low, the Commerce Department said Feb. 24.

President Barack Obama and Congress extended the first-tim buyer credit in early November to cover deals signed by April 3 and closed by June 30, and expanded it to include some current homeowners. Even so, some economists said the original measure pulled sales forward, restraining demand in subsequent months.

“We should expect to see a diminishing marginal return for this program,” said Craig Thomas, a senior economist at PNC Financial Markets in Pittsburgh. “It’s obvious there was a dramatic change in the behavior of first-time buyers and now we’ve expanded it so I think we’ll get a push of current homeowners and we’ll get a smaller share of first-time homebuyers.”

Fed Purchases

Among other concerns for the housing outlook, the Federal Reserve said it plans to end later this month a program to purchase mortgage-backed securities, which helped contain borrowing costs.

The plan helped push the rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage down to 4.71 percent in early December, the lowest level since Freddie Mac started keeping weekly records in 1972. The rate has hovered around 5 percent since then.

Foreclosures pose another threat. Foreclosure filings rose 15 percent in January compared with a year earlier and exceeded 300,000 for the 11th straight month, RealtyTrac Inc. said Feb. 11.

The housing market will “follow a similar pattern” to recovery as it did in the late 1980s and early 1990s, which both took “several years,” Toll Brothers Inc. Chief Executive Officer Robert Toll said in a statement Feb. 24. The compan the largest U.S. luxury-home builder, said its orders almost doubled in the first quarter compared with a year earlier. It projected it will sell between 2,100 and 2,750 homes in fiscal 2010 at an average price of $540,000 to $560,000 each.

Billionaire Warren Buffett said last week the U.S. residential real estate slump will end by about 2011.

“Within a year or so, residential housing problems should largely be behind us,” Buffett wrote Feb. 27 in his annual letter to shareholders of his Berkshire Hathaway Inc. “Prices will remain far below ‘bubble’ levels, of course, but for every seller or lender hurt by this there will be a buyer who benefits.”

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“The abnormally severe and prolonged winter weather, which affected large regions of the U.S., hampered shopping activity in February,” Lawrence Yun, the group’s chief economist, said in a statement. “We will see weak near-term sales followed by a likely surge of existing-home sales in April, May and June.”

My brother-in-law's brother-in-law told me Super Bowl Sunday that both listings and traffic are down...

Day 11 of Packrat refusing to register here. Day 9 Of Boofer The One Eyed Wonder Bot refusing to answer: When is Blackwell going to have the recount? Jan 30, 2006 ... by saveliberty (Proud to be Head Snowflake, Bushbot...

war  posted on  2010-03-04   10:04:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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