Advertisement

Pending home sales soar in May to highest level in two years

Share

Prospective home-buyers signed the most contracts to buy existing homes last month in more than two years, according to new data from the National Assn. of Realtors.

An index measuring sales agreements ticked up 5.9% to 101.1 from 95.5 in April, moving into positive territory and matching March’s reading.

The indicator, which forecasts the finalized sales that usually come a month or two after the signed contract, is up 13.3% from a year earlier. Analysts had expected a far smaller bounce.

Advertisement

The last time the gauge was so high was in April 2010, when a tax credit helped boost deals for previously occupied homes. Once the incentive expired, the index plummeted to a bottom of 75.9 in June 2010.

In May, however, the report from the trade group found monthly and annual gains in every region. In the West, pending sales soared 14.5% compared to April and increased 4.8% from a year earlier.

The market, according to NAR’s chief economist Lawrence Yun, is “clearly superior this year compared with the past four years,” even though low inventory, underwater homeowners and tight credit are still cramping the industry.

Yun anticipates total sales spiking 10% this year, with the national median price for existing homes rising 3% and then 5.7% next year. Housing starts will skyrocket 26% this year and then another 50% in 2013, he predicts.

Some analysts, however, note that the trade group and its million members have a vested interest in real estate returning to its former glory. Several other housing reports have recently suggested a modest but halting recovery in the market.

Earlier this week, the Case-Shiller index of home values made its first increase after seven straight months of declines, with all California cities listed climbing. New home sales improved last month, builders are requesting the most permits in years, interest rates are at new lows and demand is strong.

Advertisement

RELATED:

Home price index climbs in April

Median home price in Southland climbs

Shortage of homes for sale creates fierce competition

Building permits at 4-year high, single-family housing starts up

Follow Tiffany Hsu on Twitter and Google+

Advertisement
Advertisement