WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. home
resales tumbled to a six-month low in November after two straight
months of strong increases, underscoring the uneven nature of the
housing market recovery.
The
National Association of Realtors said on Monday existing home sales
dropped 6.1 percent to an annual rate of 4.93 million units, the lowest
level since May.
November's
steep decline probably does not signal the start of a weakening trend
and in part reflected stubbornly low inventories, which touched an
eight-month low, giving buyers limited options. Sales were up 2.1
percent from a year ago.
"The
housing market may still be improving, but it is doing so with two
steps forward and one back," said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff
Economic Advisors in Holland, Pennsylvania.
Housing
has struggled to shift into higher gear after stagnating in the second
half of 2013 in the wake of a jump in mortgage rates, which have since
pulled back from their peaks, hitting an 18-month low in November.
It has lagged an acceleration in economic activity as tepid wage growth, a shortage of properties available for sale and higher home prices sidelined first-time buyers.
November's decline exceeded Wall Street's expectations for only a drop to a 5.20-million unit pace.
That
prompted economists to lower their fourth-quarter gross domestic
product estimates by at least one-tenth of a percentage point to around a
2.6 percent annual pace, citing reduced brokers' commissions.
The
U.S. housing index was down 0.2 percent as shares in
largest home builder DR Horton slipped 0.4 percent. Lennar
Corp fell 0.43 percent, while Pulte Group
dipped 0.19 percent.
TESTING THE WATERS
But with job gains broadening and wage growth starting to accelerate, first-time buyers are wading back into the market. They accounted for 31 percent of transactions last month, the biggest share since October 2012.
That
was up from 29 percent in October. Economists and real estate agents
say a share of 40 percent to 45 percent is required for a strong housing
recovery.
"A fundamental
issue continues to be first-time home buyers, whose outlook is improving
along with the economy," said Jeff Taylor, managing partner at loan
processor Digital Risk in Maitland, Florida. Household formation, a key
ingredient for a healthy housing market, is running at about 500,000 a
year, well below the more than one million that is considered ideal.
Investors,
who had supported the market, continued to withdraw in November,
accounting for 15 percent of transactions last month, down from 19
percent in November 2013.
The
inventory of unsold homes on the market fell 6.7 percent from a year ago
to 2.09 million. Economists say insufficient equity and uncertainty
about the economy's strength were forcing potential sellers to stay in
their homes.
At November's
sales pace, it would take 5.1 months to clear houses from the market,
unchanged from October. A six months' supply is viewed as a healthy
balance between supply and demand.
The
shrinking supply lifted the median home price 5.0 percent from a year
ago. The pace, however, has slowed from the double-digit growth seen for
much of 2013.
Original Article At: U.S. existing home sales hit six-month low, inventories low
By:
By Lucia Mutikani
December 22, 2014 1:26 PM
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