"Month Over Month Existing Home Sales Fall To Multi-Year Lows
Existing home sales for November had their biggest month over month decline in at least ten years, falling 8.6%. Any hope that the real estate market got a little better in November was quickly extinguished with the release of this report this morning. At least December now has a low starting base.
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From Calculated Risk, a few more:
"The Census Bureau reports, New Home Sales in November were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 407 thousand. This is the lowest sales rate since 1982. Click on graph for larger image in new window.
The first graph shows monthly new home sales (NSA - Not Seasonally Adjusted).
Notice the Red columns for 2008. This is the lowest sales for November since 1981. (NSA, 28 thousand new homes were sold in November 2008, 27 thousand were sold in November 1981).
As the graph indicates, sales in 2008 are substantially worse than the previous years. The second graph shows New Home Sales vs. recessions for the last 45 years. New Home sales have fallen off a cliff.
Sales of new one-family houses in November 2008 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 407,000, according toAnd one more long term graph - this one for New Home Months of Supply.
estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
This is 2.9 percent below the revised October of 419,000 and is 35.3 percent below the November 2007 estimate of 629,000.

The months of supply for October was revised up to 11.8 months - the ALL TIME RECORD!
For new homes, both sales and inventory are falling quickly.
And on inventory:

TheInventory numbers from the Census Bureau do not include cancellations and cancellations are falling, but are still near record levels. Note that new home inventory does not include many condos (especially high rise condos), and areas with significant condo construction will have much higher inventory levels.
seasonally adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of November was 374,000. This represents a supply of 11.5 months at the current sales rate.
This is a another very weak report. I'll have some charts on existing home sales and more on new home sales later today ...
And more from Calculated Risk:
"Lots of housing news today ...
New Home Sales Lowest since 1982
Existing Home Sales Plunge
And here is an analysis of existing home turnover (not pretty), and NSA data showing the existing home sales plunge was worse than the headline number.
And now some more graphs ... Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph compares New and Existing home sales. Although sales tracked pretty well from 1994 through 2005, existing home sales have outperformed new home sales for the last few years.
One of the key reason for the difference is lender REO sales (foreclosure resales).
From the NY Times:
Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, said that 45 percent of all home sales in November were so-called “distressed sales,” meaning that the sellers faced foreclosure, or they were forced to sell their home for less than the value of the mortgage.If we remove REOs, existing home sales have tracked much closer to new home sales. REO sales are real sales, but this shows as long as the REO volume is high, new home sales (and non-REO existing home sales) will be under severe pressure.
The following graph shows both annual new home sales (from the Census Bureau) and sales through November.

However sales slowed in the 2nd half of 2008, and it definitely appears that annual sales will be below the 509 thousand in 1991. This would mean sales would be the lowest since 1982 (412 thousand).
Of course the U.S. population and the number of households were much lower in 1982. In 1982 there were 54.2 million owner occupied units in the U.S., in 1991 there were 61.0 million, and there are approximately 76 million today.
If we use a ratio of owner occupied units to compare periods, the low in 1982 was 412 thousand X (76/54.2) = 578 thousand units (based on the number of owner occupied units today).
The calculation for 1991 gives 634 thousand units (to compare to today).
By this measure, 2008 is the worst year for new home sales since the Census Bureau started tracking new home sales (starting in 1963)."
Felix Salmon doesn't mince( a kind of yuletide reference ) words:
"November is never a great month for home sales, but don't let that fool you: today's reports are truly gruesome, falling significantly short of very bearish expectations. New home sales, at an annualized rate of 407,000, are at their lowest level since 1991( WHEN I BOUGHT MY HOUSE, ALTHOUGH IT WAS EXISTING ); existing home sales, which were running at a rate of over 7 million a year in 2005, are now down to less than 4.5 million.
The median home price in the US is now just $181,000 -- down from $215,000 as recently as June -- and total housing inventory for sale rose in months-supply terms (thanks to the drop in sales) and is now hitting all-time record levels of about one year's supply.
All this is happening, remember, in an economy where roughly two-thirds of American households are owner-occupied. Owning one's own home, something which for most of this decade was a definite asset, is now a serious liability. Millions of workers can't move to somewhere with a better job market, and to make matters worse their net worth is now negative -- which means that no one will lend them any money, even if they are current on their mortgage payments.
And prices have further to fall: as the commenters yesterday were quick to note, if you plug real-world numbers into a buy-vs-rent calculator, especially if you make the reasonable assumption that rents aren't going to rise, it's still generally cheaper to rent than to buy( MAYER AND HUBBARD DISPUTE THIS ), plus of course you get much more freedom of movement, and the option value of being able to buy a home much more easily in the future after prices have fallen further.
I still think that trying to put an artificial floor under house prices by forcing down mortgage rates is a bad idea( I AGREE ), even as it seems to be gaining traction with Team Obama. But you can see the attraction: it's something, which at this point seems to be unambiguously better than nothing. And certainly the economy as a whole isn't going to start growing again so long as house prices and home sales continue to fall at this kind of pace. But my gut feeling is that we're in for a very long bear market in housing, and that any attempt to turn things around in the short term, if it's successful, will prove to be short-lived( I AGREE ).
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