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US new-home sales rise at year's fastest pace in March

Mark Niquette / Bloomberg
Mark Niquette / Bloomberg • 2 min read
US new-home sales rise at year's fastest pace in March
According to US government figures out Tuesday, new single-family home sales increased 7.4% from February to an annualised 682,000 pace against a Bloomberg survey of economists of 652,000 pace. (Photo by Bloomberg)
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(May 5): US new-home sales rose in March from a month earlier as the median selling price slid to a more than four-year low and builders offered incentives.

New single-family home sales increased 7.4% from February to an annualised 682,000 pace, according to government figures out Tuesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists was for a 652,000 pace.

The report also included a first read on February sales after figures were delayed by the federal government shutdown late last year.

The pickup in sales suggests a gradual improvement in affordability since the middle of last year is slowly generating more demand. Home-builders, who have been using a combination of incentives and price cuts, saw a pickup in prospective-buyer traffic in March after severe winter weather limited buyer demand early this year.

At the same time, mortgage rates have climbed from a recent low at the end of February, which could hamper home-buying activity in the coming months.

The government’s report showed the median sales price of a new home decreased 6.2% in March from a year earlier to US$387,400 — the lowest since July 2021. The number of new homes for sale fell from a year ago to 481,000.

See also: Fed’s Kashkari says next rate move uncertain because of Iran war

By region, sales in the South, the nation’s biggest home-selling region, increased 11.1%, while purchases in the Northeast rebounded sharply. March contract signings fell in the Midwest and West.

Housing construction, which has subtracted from economic growth in each of the last five quarters, risks staying limited in the months ahead as builders focus on reducing inventory.

Housing affordability is shaping up to be a key issue in the midterm elections in November, and both parties are proposing initiatives to improve the supply of housing and lower the costs for home buyers.

See also: US productivity growth cools on rebound in hours worked

Separate data out last month showed pending sales of previously owned US homes climbed for a second month in March as a pickup in inventory helped mitigate higher borrowing costs.

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