Advertisement

Sales of new homes fall in August

Share

Sales of newly built homes in the U.S. appear to be stuck at the bottom.

The August read on new home sales showed properties selling at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 295,000, down 2.3% from a revised July rate of 302,000 and just 6.1% above August 2010, according to the Commerce Department.

“With job growth at a standstill, the stock market swinging wildly, Congress wrangling over the debt ceiling and the euro zone’s problems sending consumer confidence down, sales of new homes are slipping from an already weak pace,” Celia Chen, director of housing economics at Moody’s Analytics, wrote in a note to clients. “New home sales fell below the 300,000 mark in August and are nearing the cyclical (and 48-year) low of 278,000 that sales hit in August 2010.”

Patrick Newport, U.S. economist with IHS Global Insight, said the trend for new home sales has been flat for the last 16 months.

Advertisement

“This year is shaping up to be the worst year on record for new home sales,” Newport wrote.

An estimated 162,000 newly built homes were on the market in August, representing a supply of a little more than six months and two weeks. A supply of about six months typically represents a healthy market, so if sales pick up in a meaningful way, new construction is likely to get a boost.

The median sales price of a new home, which is the point at which half the new homes sold for more and half for less, fell nearly 9% to $209,100 in August. That was the lowest price since October.

The steep drop in prices indicates that builders are struggling to attract buyers away from even cheaper so-called distressed properties, which are homes that are foreclosures or have borrowers in default.

alejandro.lazo@latimes.com

Advertisement