previous
  • 13 Door Design and Installation Tips
    13 Door Design and Installation Tips
  • 12 Remodeling Secrets Revealed
    12 Remodeling Secrets Revealed
  • Roofing articles, videos, tools, and materials
    Roofing articles, videos, tools, and materials
  • Complete Kitchen and Bath Guide
    Complete Kitchen and Bath Guide
  • Painting Ideas, Tips, and Techniques for a Professional Finish
    Painting Ideas, Tips, and Techniques for a Professional Finish
  • 9 Design Ideas & Tips for Concrete Countertops
    9 Design Ideas & Tips for Concrete Countertops
  • Deck Design & Construction Showcase
    Deck Design & Construction Showcase
  • 10 Basement-Remodeling Tips and Techniques
    10 Basement-Remodeling Tips and Techniques
  • Energy-Smart Details
    Energy-Smart Details
  • Guide to Paperless Drywall
    Guide to Paperless Drywall
  • Outdoor Kitchen Design Inspiration
    Outdoor Kitchen Design Inspiration
  • 2012 HOUSES Awards
    2012 HOUSES Awards
  • Buyer's Guide to Decking
    Buyer's Guide to Decking
  • 7 Small Bathroom Floorplan Layouts
    7 Small Bathroom Floorplan Layouts
  • Meet the Fine Homebuilding Project House!
    Meet the Fine Homebuilding Project House!
  • The Inspector Game: Decking Dos and Don'ts
    The Inspector Game: Decking Dos and Don'ts
  • Fine Homebuilding: The Digital Issues
    Fine Homebuilding: The Digital Issues
  • 7 Solutions for Kitchen Layout and Design
    7 Solutions for Kitchen Layout and Design
  • 15 Coffered Ceiling Design Ideas and Tips
    15 Coffered Ceiling Design Ideas and Tips
  • How it Works
    How it Works
next

The Daily Scoop

The Daily Scoop


NAR: Pending home sales drop in November

comments (0) January 6th, 2009 in Blogs        
FHB_Building_News Richard Defendorf, contributor
no recommendations

Job losses and other weaknesses throughout the economy finally dented the National Association of Realtors’ Pending Home Sales Index, which had been relatively stable during most of 2008 but declined 4%, to 82.3, in November from 85.7 in October. The index for November 2007 was 86.9.

The November reading, announced today, is the lowest since 2001, when the index premiered. An index of 100 represents the average level of existing-home-sale contract activity in 2001, based on a national sample of about 20% of transactions nationally. The index is seen as a predictor of transaction closings for the following two months, since finalization of a pending sale typically takes one to two months.

Given current economic conditions and diminished consumer confidence, the index drop in November was expected, NAR’s chief economist, Lawrence Yun said in a press release. Likewise for December. A lot is riding on the Obama administration’s proposed stimulus package, Yun added.

“With a proper real-estate focused stimulus measure, home sales could rise more than expected, by more than 10 percent to 5.5 million in 2009, and easily begin to stabilize home prices in many parts of the country. Stable home prices will, in turn, lessen foreclosure pressures and lay the foundations for a solid economic recovery as the nation’s 75 million homeowners regain confidence,” Yun said.

Predictions about the fate of the housing market were abundant at the Allied Social Sciences Association’s annual meeting, held over the past few days in San Francisco. Karl Case, an economics professor at Wellesley College and co-author of the Case-Shiller housing price index, says there are at least modest signs of life in the market.

Case told Reuters that states such as Arizona and Florida, where overbuilding is most apparent, are, fortunately, “places where people still want to go.” What’s more, low prices at foreclosure auctions are attracting buyers.

But Richard Curtin, an economist at the University of Michigan and director of its consumer sentiment survey, said a turnaround was unlikely during the next nine months to a year. Too many prospective buyers are still waiting for prices to fall further, credit standards are relatively high, and unemployment continues to rise.


posted in: Blogs, business

Comments (0)

You must be logged in to post comments. Click here to login.