New home sales still weak
Government report shows slight pick-up in new home
sales, but demand remains much weaker than year-ago
levels.
By Chris Isidore, CNNMoney.com senior writer
April 25 2007: 11:51 AM EDT


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- New home sales rebounded a
bit in March from depressed levels in February but
still fell short of forecasts, according to the
government's latest report, signaling ongoing weakness
for the battered real estate market.

New homes sold at an annual pace of 858,000 homes in
March, up from the 836,000 pace in February, which was
revised lower.

Photo Gallery See more photos 
 
 

Current Mortgage Rates   

Type Overall avgs 
 

30 yr fixed mtg 5.76% 
15 yr fixed mtg 5.48% 
30 yr fixed jumbo mtg 6.10% 
5/1 ARM 5.51% 
5/1 jumbo ARM 5.75% 
 
Find personalized rates:
   
 Quick Vote
Should taxpayer dollars be used to bail out subprime
borrowers with bad loans?
DefinitelyNo wayOn a case-by-case basis or View
resultsVideo More video 
 
 
CNN's Ali Velshi reports on the latest sign of a
troubled housing market. (April 25) 
Play video
 
 
 
The March reading was down 23 percent from March 2006
and was the second weakest sales pace in the Census
Bureau report since September 2001, behind only the
February reading.

Economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast that
sales would come back to an annual rate of 890,000 in
March.

Mike Larson, a real estate analyst at Weiss Research,
said that he believes weather helped to inflate the
sales numbers slightly in Wednesday's report.

"New home sales reportedly exploded by 50% in the
Northeast region between February and March. In less
weather-sensitive regions, sales were down slightly;
down 2.7 percent in the South and off 0.9 percent in
the West."

Fastest and slowest growing housing markets 
The glut of new homes on the market was little
changed, creeping up by 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted
545,000. That equates to a nearly eight-month supply
of new homes for sale at the current level of demand.

"It will take even-deeper construction cuts, lower
prices, and more incentives to get supply more closely
aligned with the reduced level of demand," Larson
said. "I'm not expecting a lasting recovery until
sometime later in 2008."

The median price for a new home sold in March was
$254,000, jumping 6.3 percent from the price of
typical new home sold a year earlier. 

But the price reading could be inflated, as a survey
by the National Association of Home Builders has found
about three out of every four builders are offering
incentives such as paying closing costs or offering
items in the home for free in order to maintain sales
in the current weak market.

The same survey has found many home builders already
reporting a drop in demand due to problems in the
subprime mortgage market. Lenders have started to
tighten underwriting standards in the face of rising
defaults and delinquencies. 

The report on new home sales follows a report by the
National Association of Realtors Tuesday that showed
the sharpest drop in existing home sales in 18 years
in March, along with a continued slide in home prices.

Subprime risk: Most vulnerable markets 
Sales of new homes constitute only a fraction of the
overall real estate market, but new home sales are
more of a leading indicator because they are recorded
at the time a contract is signed, rather than when a
sale is closed a month or two later, as the existing
home sales figures are tabulated.

A separate report Wednesday showed mortgage
foreclosure filings climbing 27 percent in the first
quarter compared with the fourth quarter of 2006 and
35 percent from a year earlier.

The weakness in home sales and revenue has hit the
results of the nation's leading home builders. Earlier
this month No. 2 home builder D.R. Horton (Charts,
Fortune 500) reported a 37 percent drop in the number
of new homes it sold in the latest quarter, citing
continued weakness in prices and saying the typical
start to the spring home buying season hasn't begun.

While Horton is expected to still report a profit for
the period, No. 4 builder Pulte Homes (Charts, Fortune
500) reported a loss in its latest quarter as did No.
3 Centex (Charts, Fortune 500) and New Jersey-based
Hovnanian Enterprises (Charts, Fortune 500). 

No. 1 home builder Lennar (Charts, Fortune 500) and
No. 5 KB Home (Charts, Fortune 500) both reported
losses in their quarters ending in November, although
both returned to an operating profit in the next
quarter. The CEO of KB Home said earlier this month
that he expects the housing slump to get worse. 



__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 

Kirim email ke