Steady US housing recovery is boosting economy
|
FILE
- This Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012 file photo shows a for-sale sign at a
home in Glenview, Ill. U.S. sales of previously occupied homes rose
solidly in October, helped by improvement in the job market and
record-low mortgage rates. |
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- From purchases and prices to builder sentiment and construction,
the U.S. housing market is making consistent gains.
The
latest evidence came in reports Monday that sales of previously
occupied homes rose solidly in October and that builders are more
confident than at any other time in 6 1/2 years.
New-home
sales and home-price indexes have reached multi-year highs. And Lowe's
Cos. on Monday reported a surge in net income, a sign that
home-improvement retailers are benefiting.
The
housing market's recovery still has a long way to go. But for now, it's
helping prop up an economy that's being squeezed by a global slowdown
and looming spending cuts and tax increases.
Joseph
LaVorgna, an economist at Deutsche Bank, estimates that the housing
recovery could boost U.S. economic growth by a full percentage point
next year. That's because a stronger housing market would mean more
jobs, especially in industries like construction, and more consumer
spending.
"Housing could provide a meaningful -
and critical - lift to overall economic activity when other growth
drivers, like exports, are slowing," LaVorgna said.
Helping
drive the housing rebound is growing confidence among builders. An
index of builder sentiment compiled by the National Association of Home
Builders/Wells Fargo rose to 46 this month, up from 41 in October. It
was the highest reading since May 2006, just before the housing bubble
burst.
Readings below 50 signal negative
sentiment about the housing market. The index last reached that level in
April 2006. Still, the index has been rising since October 2011, when
it was 17. It's surged 27 points in the past 12 months, the sharpest
annual increase on record.
A second report
Monday said sales of previously occupied homes are near five-year highs,
excluding temporary spikes in 2009 and 2010 when a homebuyer tax credit
boosted purchases. Sales rose 2.1 percent in October to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 4.79 million, the National Association of
Realtors said.
Sales are nearly 11 percent
higher than they were a year ago, though they remain below the more than
5.5 million that economists says is consistent with a healthy market.
The
Realtors' group said Superstorm Sandy delayed some purchases of
previously occupied homes in the Northeast. Sales fell 1.7 percent
there, the only region to show a drop. Those purchases will likely be
completed in coming months, the group said.
A
key factor fueling the gains is a gradually improving economy, which has
increased the number of people looking for homes. At the same time,
fewer homes are available for sale. The low supply is helping push up
prices.
Only 2.14 million homes were available
for sale at the end of October, the lowest supply in 10 years. It would
take just 5.4 months to exhaust that supply at the current sales pace.
That's the lowest sales-to-inventory ratio since 2006.
"We
built too many homes during the good years, and we have finally gotten
rid of that excess," said Patrick Newport, an economist at IHS Global
Insight.
In addition, mortgage rates have hit
all-time lows. And rents are rising, making the purchase of a
single-family home or condominium more attractive.
The
rise in people seeking to buy should support more construction over the
next year or two, economists say. More Americans are looking set up
their own households after living with relatives or friends in the
recession and its aftermath.
In a healthy
economy, the number of new households typically reaches 1.2 million a
year. It averaged only 570,000 a year from 2007 through 2011, according
to Census data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch. It reached
635,000 last year. The Census expects about 1 million new households
this year.
In September, builders broke ground
on new homes at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 872,000. That was
the fastest pace in more than four years. Yet it still trailed the rate
of household formation. The trend suggests that home construction will
have to keep rising.
Low inventory "is a sign
that housing markets are tightening, and that builders will continue
ramping up on new construction to fill demand," Newport said.
For
all the improvement in the housing industry, sales and prices remain
below normal levels. In part, that's because many potential buyers can't
meet stricter lending standards or make the larger down payments that
banks have required since the housing bust.
That
can be a particular obstacle for first-time buyers. They accounted for
31 percent of home sales in October. That was down slightly from
September and below the 40 percent common in a healthy market.
Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said last week that banks' overly tight
lending standards might be limiting home sales and holding back the
economic recovery.
Still, the steady
improvement in housing is benefiting the economy. Each new home built
creates about three jobs for a full year and yields $90,000 in taxes,
according to the homebuilders' group.
More
building also creates demand for steel, glass and other materials.
People who buy new homes usually buy more furniture, carpets and
appliances. That typically generates more manufacturing and retail jobs.
More
home construction generates more demand for pick-up trucks, as builders
and contractors add trucks to handle more work. Chrysler said last week
that it was adding 1,000 workers to a factory that makes Dodge Ram
trucks. Ford and General Motors have also said demand for trucks is
rising.
All told, Alan Levenson, chief
economist at T. Rowe Price, estimates that the housing recovery could
add 25,000 jobs a month next year.
Home
improvement chains are benefiting. In addition to Lowe's higher
earnings, Home Depot Inc. last week reported slightly higher
third-quarter net income. And Home Depot raised its full-year forecast.
The
clearest sign of a better housing market may be the increase in prices.
A measure of U.S. prices jumped 5 percent in September compared with a
year ago, according to private data provider CoreLogic. That was the
largest year-over-year increase since July 2006. Other gauges have also
shown solid gains in home prices over the past year.
Higher
home prices can also make homeowners feel wealthier and more likely to
spend more. And consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent of the
U.S. economy.
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