New home sales in July were 627,000 units SAAR. Economists expected a rebound in new home sales to 649,000 from 631,000.
The Econoday economists missed the mark badly once again in their housing estimates.
Sales in July slipped to 627,000 units seasonally adjusted annualized (SAAR), well under consensus and even lower than the bottom estimate of 630,000.
A revision took June from 631,000 to 638,000 but May was revised lower by 12,000 to 654,000.
By Region
Good News Parrot
Despite the obvious weakness in the report, the Econoday parrot found plenty of good news items to cheer about.
Now the good news. Supply moved into the market, up 2.0 percent to 309,000 new homes for sale which is the best showing since 2009. More homes for sale gives buyers more choices in what will be a likely positive for sales in the coming months. Relative to sales, supply is at 5.9 months vs 5.7 and 5.5 in the two prior months.
Another positive is a rise in prices, up a sharp 6.0 percent on the month to a median $328,700 for what is still, however, a modest 1.8 percent year-on-year increase.
Regional data show both the West and Midwest posting strong monthly gains with yearly rates at 18.5 percent and 18.2 percent respectively. The yearly rate for the South is at 17.2 percent with, however, the Northeast, which is by far the smallest region for new housing, down nearly 50 percent.
The overall year-on-year rate of growth is at 12.8 percent which if sustained would point to a badly needed uplift for the housing sector in general going into the second-half of what has been a very subdued 2018.
Supply and Price
The parrot is crowing about supply. It rose from 303,000 to 309,000. These are homes built on speck, that no one bought. Why? Most likely no one can afford them.
The parrot is crowing about the rise in price despite the fact that people are stretched to the limit already. Recall that NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun moaned yesterday that builders were not building enough homes.
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