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New home sales drop 2.2 percent in Feb. to new low

Wed Mar 24, 2010 10:07 AM EDT
business, politics, us, sales, home-sales, new-home-sales
Alan Zibel, AP Real Estate Writer

In this Feb. 22, 2010 photo, builders complete new homes in Houston. One home is for sale and the other has been sold. New home sales sink 2.2 percent to record low amid stormy weather, weak economy.(AP Photo/Pat Sullivan)

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WASHINGTON — Sales of new homes fell unexpectedly to the lowest level on record in February as stormy winter weather kept buyers on the sidelines. The weak results make clear the difficulties facing the housing industry as it tries to recover from the worst slump in decades.

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that new home sales fell 2.2 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 308,000.

It was the fourth consecutive month of declines and the worst showing on records dating to 1963. January's results, meanwhile, were revised upward slightly to a pace of 315,000.

Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected February sales would rise to an annual rate of 320,000.

Sales plummeted dramatically in parts of the country that were hit with bad weather. In the Northeast, they fell 20 percent from a month earlier. Midwestern sales fell 18 percent. Sales fell nearly 5 percent in the South but rose 21 percent in the West.

The new home sales report reflects signed contracts to purchase homes rather than completed sales and thus gives economists a feel for how many buyers were out shopping for new homes in a given month.

The number of new homes up for sale in February increased slightly to 236,000. At the current sales pace, it would take more than 9 months to exhaust that supply.

There was some positive news for builders as the median sales price climbed on both a monthly and yearly basis. It rose to $220,500, up more than 5 percent from a year earlier and up about 6 percent from January.

Home sales have been sluggish during the winter even though the deadline for a tax credit for first-time home buyers was extended. It had been set to expire on Nov. 30. The earlier deadline caused sales to surge last fall.

Congress extended the deadline until April 30 and expanded it to cover existing homeowners who move. But economists and real estate agents say the extension has not had much of an impact on sales. That also was reflected Tuesday when the National Association of Realtors said sales of previously occupied homes dropped 0.6 percent in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.02 million.

Some homebuilders say their outlook is getting better, but the recovery is not a strong one.

"A number of housing markets may be stabilizing or starting to rebound, though we do not yet see, in many respects, a sustained nationwide recovery," Jeffrey Mezger, president and chief executive officer of KB Home, a major builder, said Tuesday as his company reported a $55 million quarterly loss.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (3)
Bighorn

Unexpectedly - The winter weather caused snowfall, rain, stormy weather and kept people in doors under shelter.

AP writer Alan Zibel will also unexpectedly report that home foreclosure sales may exceed new home sales during the upcoming sunny spring and summer time.

    Reply#1 - Wed Mar 24, 2010 11:22 AM EDT
    deccles02

    Anybody ever notice how these "news articles" always claim no one expected this to happen? Does anyone besides the reporter and the fake economists actually believe that garbage?

    Weather has nothing to do with it. The market is collapsing and we're only seeing the beginning of what is coming this year.

      Reply#2 - Wed Mar 24, 2010 1:14 PM EDT
      oneforall

      How many of these home sales were to families buying the first home versus investors buying up cheap real estate, and what percentage of new homes were sold to foreign investors?

        Reply#3 - Wed Mar 24, 2010 2:19 PM EDT
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