Housing market is an important economic indicator. This news from Yahoo Finance.
Opps sorry it is so small. We need Vendit to fix it for us, may he RIP!
New home sales data impress in May.
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| | A day after existing home sales data for May disappointed, new home sales data topped expectations.
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Suggesting the housing market did indeed bottom in March and April as buyers appear eager to step in.
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In May, new home sales rose some 16.6% to an annualized pace of 676,000 units, according to data published Tuesday. Economists had expected new home sales in May to hit an annualized rate of 640,000.
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Unlike Monday’s existing home sales data, which only tracks closings on previously signed contracts, new home sales counts signings for home purchases. And so whereas existing home sales data tends to be a lagging indicator of the health of the housing market, new home sales are a leading indicator.
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And the data suggest a big recovery in the housing market has taken place over the last several weeks.
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“[Tuesday’s] new home sales data suggests the cyclical rebound story is credible and deserves to be followed quite closely in the months ahead,” said Steve Ricchiuto, chief U.S. economist at Mizuho Americas. “This was another constructive sign that the economy is poised to begin the recovery process in the third quarter, if it has not already bottomed in May/June.”
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Later this morning, investors will get the latest weekly report on mortgage applications, the most high frequency piece of housing market data.
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For weeks now, mortgage applications have suggested the housing market remains in good shape as this data captures those applying for a mortgage on a new home and those looking to use record-low interest rates to refinance.
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“Looking ahead, the complete recovery — and more — in mortgage applications suggests that both new and existing home sales are set to rise very strongly over the next few months,” said Ian Shepherdson at Pantheon Macro in a note to clients on Tuesday. “The lure of falling mortgage rates appears to have offset the hit from job losses, which appear to have been concentrated among young renters, not potential near-term homebuyers.”
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