Existing home sales started the 2021 with a small increase
from the December sale levels, the second consecutive monthly gain. The
National Association of Realtors® (NAR) said transactions that include pre-owned
single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums, and co-ops, increased 0.6 percent
in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.69 million units compared
to 6.76 million in December. The month’s results are up 23.7 percent from the
annual rate of 5.41 million sales in January 2020.
Existing home sales have increased in seven of the last
eight months, even though pending sales, generally considered a leading
indicator for the following one or two existing sales reports, have posted four
straight monthly losses.
Analysts surveyed by Econoday had expected a slight
pull-back in January’s sales. Their consensus was for annualized sales of 6.60
million units.
Sales of single-family homes were at a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of 5.93 million, a 0.2 percent gain from 5.92 million the previous
month and a 23.0 percent year-over-year increase. Condominium and co-op sales rose
4.1 percent from December to a rate of 760,000 units, 28.8 percent annual
growth.
“Home sales continue to ascend in
the first month of the year, as buyers quickly snatched up virtually every new
listing coming on the market,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist. “Sales
easily could have been even 20 percent higher if there had been more inventory
and more choices.”
The median existing-home price for
all housing types in January was $303,900, up 14.1 percent from a year ago when
the median was $266,300. It was the 107th straight month of annual gains. The median existing single-family home price
was $308,300, 14.8 percent annual growth, and condos appreciated by 8.6 percent
to a median of $269,600.
Whereas much of the economy has
suffered due to COVID-19, the housing sector has been one of the few bright
spots, according to Yun. “Home sales are continuing to play a part in propping
up the economy,” he said. “With additional stimulus likely to pass and several
vaccines now available, the housing outlook looks solid for this year.”
Yun says he expects more jobs to
return, which will spur homebuying in the coming months and predicts
existing-home sales will reach at least 6.5 million in 2021. This will be despite
an increase in mortgage interest rates due to the rising budget deficit and
higher inflation.
25.7 percent from the 1.40 million listings in January 2020. The unsold
inventory is estimated to be a 1.9-month supply at the current sales pace,
unchanged from December, but down from the 3.1-month supply a year earlier. Properties
typically remained on the market for 21 days, seasonally even with December,
but down from an estimated 43 days in January 2020. Seventy-one percent
of the homes sold in January 2021 were on the market for less than a month.
First-time buyers accounted
for one-third of January sales and individual
investors or second-home buyers purchased 15 percent of the homes sold during
the month. Nineteen percent of sales were all-cash.
Fewer than 1 percent of sales were distressed, that is foreclosure or short
sales.
Sales results for January were mixed
across the four major regions, but all posted double-digit increases in both annual
sales and appreciation. Existing-home sales fell 2.2 percent in the Northeast
to an annual rate of 870,000 units, 24.3 more than a year ago. The median price
rose 15.8 percent to $361,400.
The Midwest saw sales inch up 1.9
percent to an annual rate of 1,570,000 in January, a 22.7 percent jump from a
year prior. The median price grew 14.7 percent to $227,800.
The month-over-month increase in
sales in the South was 3.2 percent to an annual rate of 2,940,000, up 25.1
percent on an annual basis. The median price increased 14.6 percent to $263,300.
Existing-home sales in the West fell
4.4 percent from December but increased 21.3 percent from a year earlier to a rate
of 1,310,000 units. The median price was $461,800, up 16.1 percent from January
2020.
Source: mortgagenewsdaily.com