Eakinomics: Green
Shoots in the Housing Market
On days when important economic data are released, I (among others at AAF)
receive an email summarizing the data. Yesterday morning’s was entitled
“New Home Sales, October 2019” and contained the following short summary:
New Home Sales
October:
733,000
September: 738,000
M-M:
-0.7%
October 2018:
557,000
Y-Y:
+31.6%
Yowzer! Sales of new homes in October were up 31.6 percent from sales in
October 2018, but they were down from one month earlier. That
got my attention.
Housing sales and construction have been in the doldrums for quite some
time. Now I recalled that in the 3rd quarter
estimate of gross domestic product, residential construction
had added 0.18 percentage points to growth after averaging a subtraction of
0.14 percentage points over the previous six quarters. But this new report
of new home sales really got my attention.
What is going on? First, the full release indicates
that the median sales price decreased 3.5 percent from one year ago; it is
now $316,700. Lower prices help demand. In addition, the Fed has cut rates,
which provides additional fuel to the growth in wages and jobs that has
been a hallmark of the past two years. These not only boosted new home
sales, but also existing home sales. As a result total sales (new plus
existing) rose by 7.2 percent from a year earlier, and only 5.3 months of
inventory remain on the market. A full range of housing data for Q3
2019 can be found in the AAF’s Housing
Chartbook, published quarterly.
As one might expect, this increase in activity has changed the equation for
the home-building industry. Residential starts rose, and permits have
recently been issued at the fastest pace since 2007.
Housing has traditionally been an important component of business cycle
fluctuations. In the current setting, a stronger residential construction
sector is an important hedge against downside risks.
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