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Business Title: Sales of U.S. Existing Homes Rise 7.7% Sales of previously owned U.S. homes rose more than anticipated in August as investors used cash to buy distressed properties. Purchases of existing houses, which are tabulated when a contract closes, increased 7.7 percent to a five-month high 5.03 million annual rate, figures from the National Association of Realtors showed today in Washington. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a 4.75 million rate. While foreclosure-driven price declines and record-low mortgage rates are preventing a renewed slump in sales, companies like Lennar Corp. (LEN) say weaker consumer confidence and limited access to financing are restraining demand. Concern over housing and the economic slowdown may prompt the Federal Reserve today to propose new measures to shore up the recovery. Housings been down for so long, we should take whatever good news we can get, said Brian Jones, an economist at Societe Generale in New York, whose forecast was among the highest in the Bloomberg survey. Interest rates are low and pricing is attractive and people are responding. Forecasts in the Bloomberg survey of 74 economists ranged from 4.5 million to 4.99 million. Stocks and Treasuries were little changed after the figures, with the Standard & Poors 500 Index rising less than 0.1 percent to 1,202.88 at 10:14 a.m. in New York. The benchmark 10- year note yielded 1.94 percent. The median price of a previously owned home dropped 5.1 percent to $168,300 from $177,300 in August 2010, todays report showed. Compared with a year earlier, purchases increased 19 percent. The number of previously owned homes on the market declined 3 percent to 3.58 million. At the current sales pace, it would take 8.5 months to sell those houses, down from 9.5 months at the end of the prior month. Months supply in the seven months to eight months range is consistent with stable home prices, the group said. Of all purchases, cash transactions accounted for about 29 percent, the same as in July, Jed Smith, managing director of research at the NAR, said in a news conference today as the figures were released. Distressed sales, comprised of foreclosures and short sales, in which the lender agrees to a transaction for less than the balance of the mortgage, accounted for 31 percent of the total in August, up from 29 percent in the prior month. Investors were more active in absorbing foreclosed properties, Lawrence Yun, the groups chief economist, said in a statement. Investors accounted for 22 percent of purchases in August, up from 18 percent the previous month. Contract cancelations were reported by 18 percent of the groups members in August, up from 16 percent a month earlier. The cancelations reflected mortgage applications that were refused or because appraised home values were coming in below the sales price, the group said. Sales of existing single-family homes increased 8.5 percent to an annual rate of 4.47 million, the highest since January. Purchases of multifamily properties, including condominiums and townhouses, rose 1.8 percent to a 560,000 pace. Purchases climbed in all four regions, led by an 18 percent jump in the West. Demand increased 5.4 percent in the South, 3.8 percent in the Midwest and 2.7 percent in the Northeast. The residential real estate industry, which helped trigger the recession, is struggling more than two years into the economic recovery that began in June 2009. Housing starts in August dropped 5 percent to a 571,000 annual rate, the slowest in three months, Commerce Department figures showed yesterday. Miami-based Lennar, the third-largest U.S. homebuilder by revenue, reported a 31 percent drop in profit in the quarter ended Aug. 31 as sales fell. The housing market remains challenging, with already skittish customers being driven away by burdensome mortgage-qualification rules, Chief Executive Officer Stuart Miller said on a conference call. At the same time, home prices that have decreased to attractive levels and interest rates on 30-year loans at record lows are reviving interest among potential buyers, he said. Demand remained constrained however by the availability of financing and general consumer confidence, Miller said on the Sept. 19 conference call. Theres also evidence that the consumer is beginning to return in earnest to the homebuilding market. Most builders remain pessimistic. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo sentiment index dropped to 14 in September, a three-month low, from 15 in August, the Washington- based group reported this week. Readings less than 50 mean more respondents said conditions were poor. Gauges of prospective buyer traffic, current sales and purchase expectations declined. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke this month said while the housing sector was a significant driver of recovery from most U.S. recessions since World War II, this time it has fallen short. He cited an overhang of distressed and foreclosed houses, tight credit conditions for builders and potential homebuyers, and concerns by borrowers and lenders about price declines. The weakness of the housing sector and continued financial volatility are two key reasons for the frustratingly slow pace of the recovery, Bernanke said in a speech in Minneapolis on Sept. 8.
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#1. To: Brian S, all (#0)
Are homes put up for sale via foreclosures, then purchased by the bank that financed it in the first place counted in this?
OOOOPS....devil's in the details for brain shit's latest "sunny economic" outlook eh?
#4. To: e_type_jag (#3)
Are homes put up for sale via foreclosures, then purchased by the bank that financed it in the first place counted in this? OOOOPS....devil's in the details for brain shit's latest "sunny economic" outlook eh? Honestly? I'm not sure, it was a serious question. If thats the case, yes, it doesn't undermine the 'sunny' bullshit.
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