
U.S. existing home sales pace highest in 2-1/2 yrs
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Sales of previously owned U.S. homes rose in
October at a faster-than-expected pace to the highest in more than
2-1/2 years as buyers rushed to take advantage of a popular tax
credit, a survey showed on Monday. The National Association of
Realtors said sales surged a record 10.1 percent month-over-month
to an annual rate of 6.10 million units, the highest since February
2007, from a downwardly revised 5.54 million-unit pace in
September. Analysts polled by Reuters had expected October sales to
jump to a 5.70 million-unit pace from the previously reported 5.57
million units in September. Compared to October last year, home
sales were up by a record 23.5 percent. U.S. stock indexes extended
gains on the data, while Treasury debt prices were little changed.
"Many buyers have been rushing to beat the deadline for first-time
buyer credit that was scheduled to expire at the end of this month,
and similarly robust sales may be occurring in November," said
Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist. Distressed transactions
accounted for 30 percent of sales last month and continued to weigh
on house prices. First-time buyers made up a third of sales in
October. The national median home price fell 7.1 percent from
October last year, the smallest decline in over a year, to
$173,100. Homes in foreclosure typically sell for 15 to 20 percent
less than traditional homes. "Existing home sales have already
bottomed. Home prices are almost there. We are seeing a less of a
decline in house values," said Yun. The housing market is slowly
mending after a three-year decline, which contributed to tipping
the U.S. economy into its worst recession in seven decades. Housing
construction contributed to economic growth in the third quarter
for the first time since 2005. Recovery is being supported by the
$8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers, low mortgage rates and
falling house prices. The government this month extended the
incentive into next year and added a $6,500 credit for home owners
buying a new residence. It had been due to expire on November 30.
"The tax benefits going into the housing market are working, and
that's a relief," said William Larkin, portfolio manager at Cabot
Money Management in Boston. "Everything is about housing and jobs
right now." The improvement in October sales was broad-based, with
sales of single-family homes, the biggest segment of the market,
rising 9.7 percent to an annual rate of 5.33 million units, while
condominium and co-ops increased 13.2 percent to a 770,000-unit
rate. Sales were up in all four regions of the country. Prices rose
1.1 percent in the Midwest, which didn't see the same boom as the
rest of the country, while declining in the other three. The rise
in the Midwest was the first price increase in any region since
November 2008. Analysts are cautiously hoping a sustained housing
market recovery will help to improve the psychology of households,
which has been shaken by rising unemployment. While the economy
resumed growing in the July-September period after four quarters of
decline, sluggish consumer spending is seen slowing the momentum.
The inventory of existing homes for sale in October fell 3.7
percent to 3.57 million units from the previous month, NAR said. At
October's sales pace, that represented a supply of 7.0 months, the
lowest in 2-1/2 years, from September's revised 8.0 months.
(Additional reporting by Corbett B. Daly; Editing by Padraic
Cassidy)
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