Reduced Price

It has been a dismal couple months for homebuilders as poor data have spurred worries of another dip in housing.

Following a poor existing home sales number on Tuesday, yesterday’s new home sales data was even more disappointing. New home sales in May fell to a record low of 300,000 – far below expectations of 430,000 – and down nearly 33% from a downwardly-revised April number. Sales in the West region were particularly weak last month, dropping 53% from the prior month and falling 43% year-over-year.

Also frustrating for the housing industry: low interest rates haven’t spurred demand for mortgages. Despite 30-year mortgage rates falling to their lowest levels since May 2009 at 4.75%, mortgage applications declined 5.9% in the past week (as reported by the Mortgage Bankers Association yesterday). Refinancing applications dropped 7.3%, while mortgage applications for home purchases fell 1.2% in the week. The Mortgage Bankers Association’s purchase index now sits just off a 13-year low. Additionally, since the recent expiration of the Federal home buyer tax credit less than two months ago, the index has fallen in six of the last seven weeks.

Take a look at the drop in the major homebuilding stocks (all of which are at multi-month lows) since the tax credit’s expiration on April 30: