Sales of new single-family houses in May 2010 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 300,000, according to estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This is 33% below the revised April rate of 446,000 and is 18% below the May 2009 estimate of 367,000.
The median sales price of new houses sold in May 2010 was $200,900; the average sales price was $263,400. The seasonally adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of May was 213,000. This represents a supply of 8.5 months at the current sales rate.
300,000 is a new all time low annual rate of new home sales (data has been reported since 1963). This follows the end of the federal governments tax credit for those buying their first home. New houses sold:
2003 1,086,000
2004 1,203,000
2005 1,283,000
2006 1,051,000
2007 776,000
2008 485,000
2009 375,000
This is not a good sign for the economy. At the same time, we have to absorb the overbuilding bankers financed a few years ago. The damage that caused is still being dealt with. The low number of new home sales provides us some bad news on how bad things were. Until new home sales rebound to over 600,000 a year this will be a large drain on the ability to grown jobs and the economy. You have to go back to 1991 to find a year with fewer than 600,000 (other than the last 2, of course).
Related: Most Vacant New Homes Since Records Kept (1973), from March 2008 – Mortgage Foreclosure Rate Reaches Record 4.63% – Housing Rents Falling in the USA (Feb 2009)