Purchases of new U.S. homes unexpectedly jumped in July to the highest level in almost nine years, led by soaring demand in the nation’s south and adding to signs of persistent housing-market strength.
Sales increased 12.4 percent to a 654,000 annualized pace, the fastest since October 2007, Commerce Department data showed Tuesday in Washington. That exceeded the most optimistic forecast in a Bloomberg survey. Purchases in the South were the strongest since before the start of the last recession.
Employment gains and historically low borrowing costs are providing firm support for housing demand, helping reduce inventory, which will probably keep new construction elevated. The report showed an increase in the share of homes sold for less than $300,000, indicating builders are turning their sights to entry-level buyers.
The increase “makes perfect sense when interest rates are low, credit continues to ease, and the consumer is in decent shape given the jobs market,” said Brett Ryan, U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York. “You’re seeing finally that builders are responding with more supply, and that’s been one of the big problems in the current cycle.”
The median forecast of 72 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for the pace of sales to decelerate to 580,000. Estimates ranged from 540,000 to 610,000.
The Commerce Department revised the June reading lower to a 582,000 pace from a previously estimated 592,000. It’s still less than half the record pace of 1.39 million sales in 2005, before the housing bubble burst.
Unbuilt Homes
In a sign that construction will contribute to economic growth in coming months, the number of homes sold but not yet started climbed to the highest level since May 2007.
The department said there was 90 percent confidence that the change in sales last month ranged from a 0.3 percent drop to a 25.1 percent increase, underscoring the volatility of the data.
The increase in demand in July included an 18.1 percent jump in the South to a 398,000 rate, the highest since July 2007. In the Midwest, demand was the strongest since November 2007, while the Northeast posted a gain and the West was unchanged.