Skip navigation
Housing Video Gallery
Declining home prices could turn the normally red state of Virginia blue, reports CNBC's Diana Olick
James Hardie announced that it will suspend production at two U.S. plants, citing continued deterioration in the U.S. ho...
Discussing a bailout for homeowners, with Jared Bernstein, EPI and Stephen Moore, WSJ.
The housing mess is at the heart of the U.S. economic slowdown, with CNBC's Diana Olick; Chris Pummer, MarketWatch; and ...
The housing market slump has punished many real-estate investment trusts, notably in Australia, the UK and Japan. Peter ...

Current DateTime: 01:02:37 04 Nov 2008
LinksList Documentid: 24890560
  • Risk & You

      It's a risky world out there. Whether it's investment or retirement, career or home you can take steps to lower your risk profile.

  • Wall Street In Crisis

      With shock after shock to the world's financial system, the credit crunch continues to drive a major reconfiguration of the Wall Street landscape.

  • Protecting Your Portfolio

      Credit Crunch. Recession. Bear Market. There's a triple threat out there for investors. Here's a guide to managing your money.

US New-Home Sales Take Surprise Climb; Prices Fall
Reuters | 27 Oct 2008 | 11:13 AM ET
Text Size

Sales of newly constructed U.S. single-family homes rose in September and inventories shrank as builders slashed prices to their lowest level in four years to move property as a financial crisis deepens.

Home sales
AP
Home sales

The annual sales pace of 464,000 homes was up 2.7 percent from the revised August figure of 452,000, originally reported as 460,000 homes, Commerce Department data showed on Monday.

Economists polled by Reuters expected the new homes sales pace to dip to 450,000 from that original figure.

The median sales price of $218,400 was the lowest since the $211,600 level reached in September 2004, when the housing market was on the upswing. The housing inventory of 394,000 was the lowest since the 383,000 homes for sale in June 2004.

The 7.3 percent decline in inventory from August was the sharpest on record. At the current sales pace, it would take 10.4 months to clear the overstock of homes compared to the 11.4 months reported in August.

Still, analysts said high inventories would continue to pressure prices.

"The tremendous overbuild suggests that prices will remain under year on year pressure out at least through mid-2009," said TJ Marta, rates strategist at RBC Barclays Capital Markets in New York.

Markets showed little reaction to the fresh housing data. Across the regions, the strength of markets varied greatly with sales down 21.4 percent in the Northeast and up 22.7 percent in the West. The Midwest was down 5.8 percent while the South was up 0.7 percent.

The pace of existing home sales rose sharply in September to a 5.18 million-unit annual rate to log the first year-over-year increase in sales in nearly three years, according to a report from the National Association of Realtors on Friday.

Also on Monday, data on building permits showed a more narrow decline than first reported for September.

The Commerce Department said that permit activity had declined by 6.1 percent -- compared to the 8.3 percent decline first reported.

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

HOME  |  NEWS  |  MARKETS  |  EARNINGS  |  INVESTING  |  VIDEO  |  CNBC TV  |  CNBC PLUS  |  CNBC MOBILE  |  CNBC HD+
About CNBC   |   Site Map   |   Privacy Policy   |   Terms of Service   |   Advertise   |   Help   |   Feedback   |   Video Reprints
  Data is a real-time snapshot   *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes

Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis