US

US New Home Sales Plummet, Inventory Rises To The Highest Level Since 2008

Higher mortgage rates are rapidly cooling American real estate prices. US Census Bureau data shows a very sharp moderation in new housing activity in April. Sales fell to the lowest level since the public health crisis, but inventory is the standout. The market hasn’t seen this much new housing inventory since 2008, falling into a buyer’s market. If this persists, pressure for home prices to fall will materialize. 

New Home Sales Fell To The Lowest Level Since April 2020

New home sales are falling fast as the market faces rising mortgage costs and inflation. The seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of home sales fell to 591,000 in April. This is down 16.6% from the month before, and 13.7% lower than the same month last year. We know, without context that doesn’t mean a lot. It was the fewest number of homes sold since April 2020.

US New Home Sales

The seasonally adjusted annual rate of new home sales across the United States.

Source: US Census Bureau; HUD; Better Dwelling.

US New Housing Inventory Hasn’t Been This High Since 2008

Strong construction of new homes and falling demand helped relieve housing inventory pressure. Seasonally adjusted new home inventory rose to 444,000 homes in April. This is 8.3% higher than the month before and a 40.1% increase from the same month last year. US new home inventory hasn’t been this high at the end of a month since 2008.

US New Home Inventory

Seasonally adjusted new home inventory across the United States, at the end of each month.

Source: US Census Bureau; HUD; Better Dwelling.

US New Housing Inventory Reached A Buyer’s Market

Falling new home sales and rising inventory is likely to moderate home price growth soon. There was just 9 months of inventory in April, a big jump from the 6.9 months in March 2021. It’s also nearly double the 4.7 months seen in April 2021. US new home buyers haven’t seen this much inventory since May 2010.

US New Home Months of Inventory

Seasonally adjusted months of new home inventory across the United States.

Source: US Census Bureau; HUD; Better Dwelling.

Months of inventory are often used to determine whether a market is hot or not, in the US. Between 4 and 6 months of inventory is seen as balanced, where home prices are right for demand. Lower is a seller’s market and a lack of inventory tends to drive home prices higher. Above, which is where we are, is a buyer’s market where home prices are expected to fall. 

Unless inventory dries up or buyers flood the market fast, the price growth is going to face a hurdle. However, slowing activity might be a welcome condition for regulators and the market.

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  • Vishal 2 years ago

    American bubble at half the price of Canada. That tells you everything you need to know about Canada.

  • RW 2 years ago

    Oh good. They built enough supply and home prices can fall now right?

  • real estate 2 years ago

    True.
    In the US, we have huge property tax ( almost 2% ), enormous capital gain tax. Also cruel FEDS rising % every month now.
    Well controlled banks, after 2008 rules to borrow money became very rigid, in some cases unreasonably strict.
    No grounds to speculate.

  • Philemon DuMurphy 2 years ago

    Bank of Canada NEEDS to keep rates low to support housing.

  • Uri 2 years ago

    Please help me out:
    I wonder which news outlet to trust?
    Direxion Daily Homebuilders & Supplies ETF (NAIL) is up 12% today – May 25th..

  • Ron Bruce 2 years ago

    15 years to correct??? The Central Banks and consumer Banks can’t wait this long, as increases in property values are already baked into their long term plans. If they don’t have ever-increasing debt financing, what will they do? Developers and Apartment/high-rise building owners count on runaway property values to keep gouging the consumer. Investing in new technologies or new businesses (aka Jobs) is too risky for Banks to entertain when laundering offshore money is far more lucrative.

  • Uri 2 years ago

    NAIL ETF up again today 12%
    For those who think the real estate market going to collapse please read again the IMF Paper titled: financial repression
    The only asset that will survive is Real Estate

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