On June 26 local time, Reuters reported that the housing market is the sector heavily affected by the US Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes from March 2022. The resurgence of mortgage interest rates also reduces sales of used homes and new home construction.
“As it stands, this report will be further evidence to the US Federal Reserve that monetary policy is constrained and it is time to start cutting interest rates in the coming months,” said Richard de Chazal, macro analyst at investment banking group William Blair.
New home sales fell 11.3% to an annual rate of 619,000 last month, the slowest pace since November, according to the U.S. Commerce Department's Bureau of Statistics.
“New home sales are likely to continue to weaken until we see more significant declines in mortgage rates,” said Nancy Vanden Houten, chief economist at Oxford Economics.
In the Northeast, sales fell 43.8%. Meanwhile, sales fell 4.5% in the West last month and dropped 12% in the populous South. In the Midwest, they fell 8.6%.
The median price of a new home fell 0.9% to $417,400 in May from a year earlier. Nearly half of the new homes sold last month were priced below $399,000.
A survey from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) last week showed the proportion of companies cutting prices to boost sales in June was at a five-month high.
Major homebuilders including Lennar and KB Home are offering incentives, a strategy that has kept orders high. Both companies reported rising profits in the second quarter, according to Bloomberg. Builders are shifting toward smaller homes to try to accommodate buyers’ budgets.
“The amount of new home inventory will likely keep home prices from rising too sharply in the second half of 2024, making home buying less expensive and contributing to a moderation in inflation in 2025,” said Bill Adams, chief economist at Comerica Bank.
Source: https://laodong.vn/kinh-doanh/doanh-so-ban-nha-moi-o-my-giam-manh-1358335.ldo
Comment (0)