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Home builder confidence rises to highest level in six years

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Home builder sentiment climbed in October to its strongest level since June 2006 as more serious buyers expressed interest in buying new single-family homes.

The one-point gain in the National Assn. of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index doesn’t seem like much. But the increase was the sixth straight monthly upswing for the measure, bringing it to a level of 41.

Still, any number less than 50 shows that more builders consider sales conditions to be poor.

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Measures of sentiment toward current sales conditions and prospects over the next six months both stayed at less-than-optimistic levels. Confidence levels improved in three regions and stayed the same in the Northeast, but remain depressed.

A component in the National Assn. of Home Builders index showed that, according to builders’ reports, prospective buyer traffic soared five points to 35 — that gauge’s highest level since April 2006.

“The concern is that, even though demand for new homes is rising, overly tight credit conditions are still constraining new building and new purchases at a time when that kind of economic activity and the job growth it generates are greatly needed,” said Barry Rutenberg, chairman of the home builders group.

In the Southland, a major dip in foreclosed homes helped push up home prices in September. Foreclosed homes made up a sixth of the region’s resale market — the lowest level in nearly five years.

Median home prices climbed to a four-year high, but a supply squeeze caused sales to plummet in Southern California in September. Inventory of lower-priced homes shrank more than 40% over the last year.

tiffany.hsu@latimes.com

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