It's About Time Democrats Are Finally Calling Themselves Socialists
Democreeps Only Believe Women When It’s Useful to Them
Donna Brazile Calls on Graham Platner to Drop Out So He Can Do...
CNN Was Just Incapable of Enjoying the 4th of July—but They Were Not...
Alicia Keys Doesn't Want Women to Have Equal Rights
How Mike Rowe's 'Build Freedom' Aims to Restore the Dignity of American Work
Mamdani's Twisted View of America
Chicago’s Violence Interruption Industry Faces Questions After Homicides Tick Up
Culture Still Matters
How My Father Mastered Cooling Our House Without Air Conditioning
The Tyrant’s Funeral Cannot Bury the Truth
We're Officially the World's Most Hated Soccer Team
The U.S. Has Been Eliminated in the World Cup After a Historic Run
How Did This Mistake Already Happen Again?
Sen. John Fetterman Blasts Graham Platner's Backers After Newest Allegation
OPINION

More Housing Woes

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
More Housing Woes

Strong retail sales earnings quickly took a backseat to more disappointment in the housing sector. Existing home sales laid a giant egg, declining to an annual rate of 5,440,000 down 1.3% from June and below consensus of 5,550,000. This is the lowest tally of 2017, and the weakest since August 2016, which means that burst of post-election excitement has faded.

Advertisement

But, I don’t think this is a demand problem. Supply continues to be very tight and prices have finally caught up to the industry. Median home prices declined to $258,300 from $263,300 from June as each region experienced a pullback.

The more pronounced declines came in the Northeast $290,000 from $296,000 and Midwest $205,400 from $211,500, as both regions also saw declines in sales.

Sales in the south rose 2.2% and west 5.0%.

Lower-end homes continue to see dramatic declines in sales even as first time buyers improved to 33% from 32% of total buyers. Note: that number has to get near 40% to signal a real housing recovery.

% Change in Sales from 1 Year Ago
Region
$0-100K
$100-250K
$250-500K
$500-750K
$750K-1M
$1M+
Northeast
-5.2%
-2.8%
2.4%
10.2%
10.6%
9.8%
Midwest
-11.9%
-2.8%
9.9%
3.4%
16.2%
13.1%
South
-19.6%
0.7%
13.3%
16.9%
10.9%
22.5%
West
-18.5%
-15.7%
1.9%
13.1%
18.1%
24.9%
U.S.
-14.2%
-2.7%
7.8%
12.5%
14.2%
19.8%

With the market meandering, it’s hard to see how it can find that spark going into the close. It’s not panic time, but more questions are being asked about the economy and Washington, D.C., and that is a problem.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement