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Today the Census Bureau reported new home sales came in as a beat of estimates at 800,000 and monthly supply of new homes broke under six months. However, the revisions were unfavorable, which should be noted since month-to-month data for new home sales can be wild and the revisions are a key trend to follow. However, the recent jump in the HMI data (builder confidence) can be attributed to a stabilization in the monthly supply data and a recent uptick in demand.
Census reported that “Sales of new single‐family houses in September 2021 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 800,000, according to estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This is 14.0 percent (±17.9 percent)* above the revised August rate of 702,000, but is 17.6 percent (±12.1 percent) below the September 2020 estimate of 971,000.”
Just to remind everyone, the year-over-year comps on all housing data should contain an asterisk because the make-up demand surge we saw toward the end of the last year created unrealistic comps. I knew some extreme YouTube fanatical housing crash bears would use the negative year-over-year data in purchase applications to promote a housing crash premise. This was why early in 2021, I wrote an article that said to expect that purchase application data would be negative but not overreact.
The post New home supply shows this housing market has stabilized appeared first on HousingWire.
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