U.S. Economy: New-Home Sales Up 11%, Most Since 2000 (Update1)
By Courtney Schlisserman and Bob Willis
July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Purchases of new homes in the U.S.
climbed 11 percent in June, the biggest gain in eight years,
underscoring evidence that the deepest housing slump since the
Great Depression is starting to stabilize.
Sales increased to a 384,000 annual pace, higher than every
forecast in a Bloomberg News survey and the most since November,
figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington.
The number of houses on the market dropped to the lowest level
in more than a decade.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
economists said today’s figures signal an end to the slide in
home construction and sales. While that means the drag on
economic growth will turn to a stimulus in the second half of
the year, property values are likely to continue falling and
rising unemployment will temper the recovery, analysts said.
“We’re barely past the housing bottom, this thing is still
fragile,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at
Deutsche Bank Securities in New York. “It’s not premature to
talk about home prices bottoming -- it’s somewhere in the next
three to six months. There is light at the end of the tunnel.”
Builders’ stocks jumped, with the Standard and Poor’s
Supercomposite Homebuilding Index gaining 4.4 percent. The
broader S&P 500 Stock Index was up 0.3 percent to close at
982.18. Treasuries, which fell earlier in the day, remained
lower, with benchmark 10-year note yields rising to 3.72 percent
at 4:37 p.m. in New York from 3.66 percent at last week’s close.
Construction Recovers
The Commerce Department earlier this month reported that
builders began work on 582,000 residential properties at an
annual rate in June, the most since November. Home construction
has subtracted from U.S. gross domestic product every quarter
since the start of 2006.
The jump in sales signals the U.S. economy is on the way to
recovery, said Rebecca Blank, under secretary for economic
affairs at the Commerce Department.
“Across the board this is good news,” Blank, formerly a
fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said in an
interview. “It’s what you would expect to see at the beginning
of a recovery.”
Standard Pacific Corp., the U.S. homebuilder that gets most
of its revenue from California, is among companies seeing
stabilization. It’s net loss, the 11th consecutive drop,
narrowed to $23.1 million in the second quarter from $249
million a year earlier, the Irvine, California-based company
said last week. Revenue fell 29 percent.
Smaller Losses
“While we still obviously have not achieved the level of
profitability that we ultimately need, we are a lot closer than
we were a couple of quarters ago and believe that we are in
pretty good shape in the short run,” Chief Executive Officer
Ken Campbell said in a July 22 statement.
While prices continue to fall, the pace of the decline is
easing. The S&P/Case Shiller index of 20 major metropolitan
areas tomorrow may show property values fell 17.9 percent in May
from a year earlier, according to the median forecast in a
Bloomberg survey. The measure was down 18.1 percent in the 12
months ended April.
“In terms of residential investment and home sales and
housing starts, I think it has” bottomed, said Jan Hatzius,
chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs in New York, referring to
the housing slump. “We still have a period of declines ahead of
us” in prices, he also said.
The decline in prices and a drop in mortgage rates have
started to lure buyers even amid the surge in unemployment,
which reached a quarter-century high of 9.5 percent in June.
Economists’ Forecasts
Economists had forecast new home sales would rise to a
352,000, according to the median of 62 projections in a
Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from 335,000 to 377,000.
Commerce revised May’s reading up to a 346,000 rate from a
previously reported 342,000.
The median price of a new home decreased 12 percent to
$206,200 from $234,300 in June 2008. Last month’s value compares
with $219,000 in May.
Builders had 281,000 houses on the market last month, down
4.1 percent from May and the fewest since February 1998. The
number of unsold properties fell a record 36 percent from June
2008. It would take 8.8 months to sell all homes at the current
sales pace, the lowest level since October 2007.
Foreclosure filings reached a record in the first half of
the year, providing competition for homebuilders and pushing
down the value of all houses. Also, rising unemployment, which
economists forecast will top 10 percent by early 2010, threatens
to restrain any recovery in housing.
Fed Efforts
Federal Reserve policy makers have committed to a $1.25
trillion program to purchase securities backed by home loans in
an effort to put a floor under the housing market and lower
borrowing costs. Those purchases, as well as direct government
purchases of Treasuries, drove the rate on 30-year mortgages to
a record-low 4.78 percent in April, according to figures from
Freddie Mac. Rates have since hovered around 5 percent.
Fed Chairman Bernanke said July 21 that the economy is
showing “tentative signs of stabilization” and the “decline
in housing activity appears to have moderated.”
Another incentive is the $8,000 tax credit for first-time
buyers that is part of the Obama administration’s economic
stimulus plan. Purchases have to be completed before Dec. 1.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Courtney Schlisserman in Washington
cschlisserma@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: July 27, 2009 16:39 EDT