Current Housing Indicators |
| CURRENT | PREVIOUS | ||
| Existing Home Sales | 4.99m | ▲ | 4.89m |
| New Home Sales | 512,000 | ▼ | 525,000 |
| Housing Starts | 975,000 | ▼ | 1.008m |
| Building Permits | 969,000 | ▼ | 982,000 |
| HMI | 88.2 | ▲ | 83.0 |
| Existing Home Prices | $208,600 | ▼ (annually) | $222,700 |
| New Home Prices | $231,000 | ▼ (annually) | $245,000 |
- Builders Bow Out Of Market Rally
- “One In Six Americans Are Underwater on Loans”: Horse Hockey!
- McCain's Housing Plan: People Get Overpriced Homes For Free?
- How To Fix Foreclosures
- Coldwell Bankers' Home Sale Price Reduction: One Tough Sell
- Everyone Gets Mortgage Rate Of 5.25 Percent? I Don't Think So
- Nobody Really Wants To Buy A House Right Now
- Why Not Bail Out The Housing Speculators? Really!
- Hey--Take Some Of That Bailout And Buy New Home Inventory
- Confidence in Housing: At What Price Can It Be Bought?
- Executive Decision: Waste Management CEO David Steiner
- Lightning Round: Microsoft, Google, Dell and More
- Lightning Round OT: AIG, Home Depot and More
- CEO Sell-Offs
- Hedge Fund Pain Is Your Gain
- Cramer: This Market Can’t Be Trusted
- Your First Move For Tuesday October 14th
- Web Extra: A Few Tuesday Trades
- Pops & Drops, Alcoa, RIMM...
- Blackstone Says US Action Breaks Back of Crisis
- European Shares Rally on Bailout Action
- SABMiller Beer Volumes Rise, Warns on Year
- Plan Will Bring Markets Back to Normal: Bernanke
- European Shares Set to Extend Rally on US Plan
- South Korea Is Ready to Aid Banks as Won Jumps
- Markets Surge Ahead of US $250 Billion Bank Bailout
- Dr. Doom: US Bailout Plan Will Probably Fail
- Japan Unveils Market Steps, Stocks Soar

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AP |
What’s interesting to me about this number is that at the beginning of the downturn in housing we didn’t see a huge drop in construction jobs, primarily because workers moved from residential into commercial.
Now that commercial is slowing as well, construction workers are falling out of jobs like flies. And they’re not the only ones. Big surprise furniture manufacturing jobs are falling as well. Domain furniture, a fave of mine, recently went out of business.
Anything related to housing right now appears to be toxic. I even read an article in the Washington Post about how garden centers are doing all they can to get people to spend money on the stuff around their homes. Discounts are big, so get thee to the nursery soon!
But getting back to the jobs number. Nearly half a million jobs gone from one sector alone, and yet you don’t hear so much about jobs in all the talk from lawmakers and policy-makers. It’s all about homeowners/borrowers and bailouts. I wonder if we’re not missing something here.
Questions? Comments?


