Mike Larson - Weiss Research expert on housing, interest rates, mortgages, and consumer finance.

Existing home sales dipped 2.7% in August

by Mike Larson on September 24, 2009

in Economy, Housing Market, Real Estate

The August existing home sales figures were just released. Here’s what the numbers looked like:

* Existing home sales fell 2.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.1 million units from 5.24 million in July. That was below the 5.35 million units that economists were expecting.

* Single-family sales dropped 2.8%, while condo and cooperative sales fell 1.6%. By region, sales fell in most parts of the country. They were down 3.1% in the South, 2.2% in the Northeast, and 6.6% in the Midwest. Sales gained 2.7% in the West.

* The raw number of homes for sale dropped 10.8% to 3.622 million units from 4.062 million in July. Supply was off 16.4% from a year earlier. The months supply at current sales pace indicator of inventory dropped to 8.5 from 9.3. Single family inventory fell to 8.2 from 8.5, while condo inventory slipped to 12 from 14.5.

* The median price of an existing home dropped 2.1% to $177,700 from $181,500 in July. That was down 12.5% from $203,200 in the year-ago period.

The existing home market hit a speed bump in August. Sales fell for both condos and single family homes, and in three out of four regions the country. It shouldn’t be much of a surprise to see sales take a breather after four straight gains, including the biggest monthly rise ever in July.

There was also some encouraging news on the inventory front. The raw number of homes for sale dropped more than 16% year-on-year, while the month supply at current sales pace indicator fell to its lowest level since April 2007. So yes, the August figures are somewhat disappointing. But no, they don’t derail the overall recovery thesis.


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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

1 LJG 09.25.09 at 9:59 AM

There is no recovery in housing. Actually, there is no recovery in any sector of the economy. There was a slight uptick in housing over the summer (and it was really slight, and the media hyped it), but now that summer is over, you are going to see that the housing crisis is far from over. Housing prices are still too high, foreclosures are still rampant, the majority of people who have jobs don’t have jobs that allow them buy anything but bare necessities (most people dont have money for houses or cars or durable goods). We need to depend on something other than housing and consuming for our economy, but I guess it is too late for that now. We are hosed. In addition, the Fed is stupid beyond belief and should be abolished.

2 Toru Kubo 10.16.09 at 12:30 AM

Oct. 14th Dow hit 10000 with J.P.M report.
J.P. Morgan posted third-quarter earnings $3.6 billion, or 82 cents a share, compared to $527 million, or 9 cents a share, a year ago.

Also J.P.M added.
“The consumer-managed provision for credit losses was $9 billion, compared with $5.7 billion in the prior year, reflecting higher net charge-offs and an increase in the allowance for credit losses in the home lending and credit card loan portfolios,” the bank said in a written statement.

Above is a report on paper based Wall street’s economy.
Below is a report on The Mother of Bear.
And you described is a report on streets.

“Printing Money has done nothing for economy.”
Could Ben swap mother of bear for gold without help?
Things going similar to Steven King ‘Carrie’.

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