US home sales likely rose again in November
WASHINGTON, DC, USA
Home resales are expected to have risen to their highest level in nearly three years in November, as an extraordinary level of federal support has pulled the housing market back from the worst downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Economists project home sales rose 2.5 per cent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.25 million, up from 6.1 million in October, according to Thomson Reuters. If accurate, it would be the third-straight increase and the best month for home sales since February 2007.
The National Association of Realtors’ report was scheduled for release yesterday.
“Things are stabilising,” said Pete Flint, chief executive of real estate website Trulia.com. “There is a significant amount of buyer interest out there.”
One encouraging sign, at least for sellers, is that prices are stabilising and rising in some areas. About one in five sellers who listed their homes at the start of December cut their prices at least once, down from about one in four during most of the year.
Buyers last month were racing to finish their sales before the original expiration date of a tax credit. It was originally scheduled to expire on November 30, but Congress decided last month to renew and expand it.
In addition to a credit of up to US$8,000 for first-time buyers, homeowners who have lived in their current properties for at least five years can now claim a tax credit of up to US$6,500 if they relocate. To qualify, buyers must sign a purchase agreement by April 30.
But now that the deadline pressure has lifted, many analysts expect sales to drop during the winter months and recover in the spring.
“Buyers have no sense of urgency now,” said Gary DeRosa, an agent with ZipRealty Inc in Seattle.
And many experts caution that the pain for the housing market isn’t over. A record 14 per cent of homeowners with a mortgage are either behind on their payments or in foreclosure.
Home prices are likely to start falling again as foreclosures make up a larger share of sales during the winter months, when sellers generally keep their homes off the market.
Prices fell 0.7 per cent from September to October, according to a report released Monday by real estate data company First American CoreLogic. The company forecasts prices in large cities will fall about 4 per cent before hitting bottom in March.
AP