March 21, 2013, 11:23 a.m. EDT
Home sales reach highest rate since 2009
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By Ruth Mantell,
MarketWatch
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Existing-home sales rose in February
to reach the highest rate in more than three years, another sign of a
strengthening housing market, as inventories posted an unusually large gain in
the month, a trade group said Thursday.
ECONOMY AND
POLITICS | @MKTWEconomics
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• Panel on Washington fiscal drama
Doug Holtz-Eakin of the American Action Forum, Peter Orszag of Citigroup and Joseph LaVorgna of Deutsche Bank join Seib & Wessel.
• The charts that explain what the Fed is doing
• U.S. jobless claims remain near 5-year low
• March U.S. flash manufacturing PMI rises
• Home sales reach highest rate since 2009
• Philly Fed index turns positive
• Leading economic index up 0.5% in February
Economists polled by MarketWatch had expected a pace of 5.02 million for February, compared with an original estimate of a 4.92 million rate in January. See economic calendar. On Thursday, NAR upwardly revised January’s rate to 4.94 million.
While sales remain below prerecession and bubble levels, low mortgage rates and an improving jobs picture are supporting demand. Also, rising prices are encouraging activity, luring sellers to place homes on the market.
Inventories rose 9.6% in February to 1.94 million existing homes available for sale. The months’ supply of existing homes rose to 4.7 in February from 4.3 in January, the first increase since April, but still a relatively low figure. January’s months’ supply was the lowest since May 2005.
Compared with February 2012, the median sales price rose 11.6% to $173,600. Elsewhere Thursday, a federal agency reported that home prices in January climbed 6.5% from the same period in the prior year. Read more about the government’s estimate.
Reuters
Other housing data released this week indicated a housing market that is growing stronger over the long term, despite some mixed recent indicators. Construction on new U.S. homes recently nudged up, and confidence among home builders declined. Read more about construction.Read more about builder confidence.
Going forward, there’s concern that overly stringent lending standards and ongoing high unemployment could cut the housing market’s improvement.
Still, analysts expect the housing market to continue to add to economic growth this year given the Federal Reserve’s backing and an economy that is adding jobs. Indeed, a recent reading on building permits, which are a sign of future demand, hit the highest level since June 2008.
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