Lower Mortgage Rates Give New-Home Sales Best Month Since Spring - Real Estate, Updates, News & Tips
iPro Real Estate

iPro Real Estate

Lower Mortgage Rates Give New-Home Sales Best Month Since Spring

Sales of newly built single-family homes picked up at the end of last year, reaching the highest level since May 2018, a newly released report from the U.S. Commerce Department shows. New-home sales increased 3.7 percent in December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 621,000 units (the number of homes that would sell if this pace continued over the next 12 months).

“Despite a period of weakness in the fall, new home sales ended the year with a small gain,” said Robert Dietz, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders. "While the December sales pace improved on a monthly basis, the current rate of sales remains off the post-Great Recession trend due to housing affordability concerns made worse by the rise in mortgage interest rates at the end of the year. We expect lower mortgage rates in the early months of 2019 will lead to additional new home demand."

Inventories of new homes for sale also rose in December, reaching 344,000 homes, considerably higher than last year's figure of 294,000.

The median sales price rose in December to $318,600, still lower than a year ago when the median sales price was $343,300. The lower home price is “primarily due to the rising use of price incentives and a slow change toward additional entry-level inventory,” the NAHB notes.

Still, builders express ongoing concerns over continued labor and lot shortages and the rising costs of building materials as limiting new-home construction.

However, the slight gain last year in new-home sales reflects “solid underlying demand for homeownership," says Greg Ugalde, NAHB chairman. "Housing affordability remains a challenge across the country, but conditions have improved in early 2019, as illustrated by the recent uptick in builder confidence."

Regionally, new-home sales in December fell 16 percent in the Northeast and by 1 percent in the West. On the other hand, new-home sales increased 4 percent in the South and by 6 percent in the Midwest.

Source: “New Home Sales Up 1.5% for the Year,” National Association of Home Builders’ Eye on Housing blog (March 5, 2019) and “U.S. New Home Sales at Seven-Month High; Services Sector Picks Up,” Reuters (March 5, 2019)

This website includes images sourced from third party websites including Adobe, Getty Images, and as otherwise noted.