Sales of existing homes rise to highest since 2007

Houses stand in a residential development near Boerne, Texas, U.S., on April 16, 2016. Sales of previously owned homes climbed in May to the highest level in more than nine years, indicating that demand for residential real estate remains robust, National Association of Realtors data showed Wednesday. CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Matthew Busch.

Sales of previously owned homes climbed in May to the highest level in more than nine years, indicating that demand for residential real estate remains robust, National Association of Realtors data showed Wednesday.

Key points:

–Contract closings climbed 1.8 percent to a 5.53 million annual rate (forecast was 5.55 million), the fastest pace since February 2007.

–Sales increased 6.3 percent from May 2015 before seasonal adjustment.

- FWBP Digital Partners -

–Median price of an existing home rose 4.7 percent from May 2015 to a record $239,700.

–Inventory of available properties decreased 5.7 percent from May 2015 to 2.15 million. units

Big picture:

Housing demand is showing signs of improving from 2015 when 5.25 million homes were sold, the best year for Realtors since before the last recession. A firm labor market, steadily rising wages and low interest rates are combining to give residential real estate some room to run. More supply of new and existing homes that helps moderate price growth would help make housing more affordable for first-time buyers and provide an added spark for the market and the economy.

- Advertisement -

Economist takeaways:

–“The housing market is clearly moving in the right direction, and it’s going to contribute more to economic growth going forward,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Still, “Inventories are very lean. That’s going to come at the expense of future sales.”

–“Whatever is coming onto the market, it is picking up buyers very fast,” Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors in Washington, said to reporters as the data were released. “There’s a lot of yellow lights flashing to say watch out for affordability.”

The details:

- Advertisement -

–Sales increased most in the West, where contract closings climbed 5.4 percent to a 1.18 million pace from a month earlier.

–At the current pace, it would take 4.7 months to sell inventory of homes, matching April. Less than a five months’ supply is a tight market, the Realtors group has said.

–Properties were on the market for 32 days in May, down from 40 days at the same time a year ago and the shortest since the NAR began tracking figures in 2011.

–Single-family home sales increased 1.9 percent to an annual rate of 4.9 million while purchases of multifamily properties increased 1.6 percent to a 630,000 pace.

–First-time buyers accounted for 30 percent of all sales, down from 32 percent in April.