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Home sales fell nearly 6% in July as housing market slides into a recession

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Latest housing market piece on CNBC following today's new data ... for those following this subject in recent months.

Home sales fell nearly 6% in July as housing market slides into a recession
By: Diana Olick - CNBC.com

Sales of previously owned homes fell nearly 6% in July compared with June, according to a monthly report from the National Association of Realtors.

The sales count declined to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 4.81 million units, the group added. It is the slowest sales pace since November 2015, with the exception of a brief plunge at the beginning of the Covid pandemic.

Sales fell about 20% from the same month a year ago.

“In terms of economic impact we are surely in a housing recession because builders are not building,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors. “However, are homeowners in a recession? Absolutely not. Homeowners are still very comfortable financially.”

The July sales figures are based on closings, so the contracts were likely signed in May and June. Mortgage rates spiked higher in June, with the average rate on the 30-year fixed loan crossing 6%, according to Mortgage News Daily. It then settled back into the high 5% range. That rate started this year around 3%, so the hit to affordability in June was hard, especially coupled with soaring inflation.

Homebuyers are also still contending with tight supply. There were 1.31 million homes for sale at the end of July, unchanged from July 2021. At the current sales pace, that represents a 3.3-month supply.

While demand is falling off due to weaker affordability, prices remain stubbornly high. The median price of a home sold in July was $403,800, an increase of 10.8% year over year. Price gains are now moderating, though, as this is the smallest annual increase since July 2020.

“The median home sales price continued to climb, but at a slower pace for the fifth consecutive month, shining a light on how downshifting buyer demand is moving the housing market back toward a more normal pace of activity,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com. “A look at active inventory trends shows that home listings were nearly twice as likely to have had a price cut in July 2022 compared to one year ago.”

Sales activity continues to be stronger on the higher end of the market, although that too is fading fast. There is simply more supply available on the top tiers. Sales of homes priced between $100,000 and $250,000 were 31% lower compared with the year before, while sales of homes priced between $750,000 and $1 million were down 8%. Sales of homes priced above $1 million fell 13% from a year ago.

First-time buyers represented just 29% of buyers in July. Historically they usually make up about 40% of sales, but they are clearly struggling the most with affordability. High rents are also making it harder for them to save for a down payment.

Even as sales slow, this is still a fast-moving market. A typical home in July went under contract in just 14 days, which matches the fastest ever recorded in June. One year ago, it was 17 days. Yun called that “unusual.”
 
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Latest housing market piece on CNBC following today's new data ... for those following this subject in recent months.

Home sales fell nearly 6% in July as housing market slides into a recession
By: Diana Olick - CNBC.com

Sales of previously owned homes fell nearly 6% in July compared with June, according to a monthly report from the National Association of Realtors.

The sales count declined to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 4.81 million units, the group added. It is the slowest sales pace since November 2015, with the exception of a brief plunge at the beginning of the Covid pandemic.

Sales fell about 20% from the same month a year ago.

“In terms of economic impact we are surely in a housing recession because builders are not building,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors. “However, are homeowners in a recession? Absolutely not. Homeowners are still very comfortable financially.”

The July sales figures are based on closings, so the contracts were likely signed in May and June. Mortgage rates spiked higher in June, with the average rate on the 30-year fixed loan crossing 6%, according to Mortgage News Daily. It then settled back into the high 5% range. That rate started this year around 3%, so the hit to affordability in June was hard, especially coupled with soaring inflation.

Homebuyers are also still contending with tight supply. There were 1.31 million homes for sale at the end of July, unchanged from July 2021. At the current sales pace, that represents a 3.3-month supply.

While demand is falling off due to weaker affordability, prices remain stubbornly high. The median price of a home sold in July was $403,800, an increase of 10.8% year over year. Price gains are now moderating, though, as this is the smallest annual increase since July 2020.

“The median home sales price continued to climb, but at a slower pace for the fifth consecutive month, shining a light on how downshifting buyer demand is moving the housing market back toward a more normal pace of activity,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com. “A look at active inventory trends shows that home listings were nearly twice as likely to have had a price cut in July 2022 compared to one year ago.”

Sales activity continues to be stronger on the higher end of the market, although that too is fading fast. There is simply more supply available on the top tiers. Sales of homes priced between $100,000 and $250,000 were 31% lower compared with the year before, while sales of homes priced between $750,000 and $1 million were down 8%. Sales of homes priced above $1 million fell 13% from a year ago.

First-time buyers represented just 29% of buyers in July. Historically they usually make up about 40% of sales, but they are clearly struggling the most with affordability. High rents are also making it harder for them to save for a down payment.

Even as sales slow, this is still a fast-moving market. A typical home in July went under contract in just 14 days, which matches the fastest ever recorded in June. One year ago, it was 17 days. Yun called that “unusual.”


I have been many times accused of being only negative but i will go postive on housing once we get to the point where middle classAmericans working a job can afford amodest middle class house again
 
I have been many times accused of being only negative but i will go postive on housing once we get to the point where middle classAmericans working a job can afford amodest middle class house again

Depending on the area, we may not get back there. There are no real middle class people who can afford a house in Mt. Pleasant or the Charleston peninsula for example. I don’t see that changing. And these aren’t San Francisco/NYC type outliers. This is South Carolina.
 
I was told we are not in a recession.

Who am I supposed to believe? The guy who owns the most awesome Clemson site on the planet, or the guy who can't walk up a set of steps or ride a bike without falling over.

Yeah, I think I'll stick with Ard @Cris_Ard on this one.
 
I was told we are not in a recession.

Who am I supposed to believe? The guy who owns the most awesome Clemson site on the planet, or the guy who can't walk up a set of steps or ride a bike without falling over.

Yeah, I think I'll stick with Ard @Cris_Ard on this one.


if you read back on my posts i am looking at the data and we started a business recession last year and the first two quarters of this year based on traditional standards have confirmed it

this recession is going to continue and get eorse over the next three to 4 quarters and improve as we approach 2024 elections

housing is housing is going to tank and not recover until after 2024 second quarter

this is my opinion based in data

stock market is going to be good in 2023going forward

business in 2023 is going yo be tough

again all my opinion based on data i watch

you can make money in any circumstance

just look back at the boom bust cycle of the 60s and 70s
 
if you read back on my posts i am looking at the data and we started a business recession last year and the first two quarters of this year based on traditional standards have confirmed it

this recession is going to continue and get eorse over the next three to 4 quarters and improve as we approach 2024 elections

housing is housing is going to tank and not recover until after 2024 second quarter

this is my opinion based in data

stock market is going to be good in 2023going forward

business in 2023 is going yo be tough

again all my opinion based on data i watch

you can make money in any circumstance

just look back at the boom bust cycle of the 60s and 70s
This was in no way directed at you. It was pure sarcasm.

The media has told us we can no longer point to 2 consecutive quarters of declining GDP as a recession.

I included Cris because he runs a very successful business, yet we have a "leader of the free world" who can't walk up a set of stairs without falling, or ride a bike without falling over.
 
Depending on the area, we may not get back there. There are no real middle class people who can afford a house in Mt. Pleasant or the Charleston peninsula for example. I don’t see that changing. And these aren’t San Francisco/NYC type outliers. This is South Carolina.
No middle class person has had the funds to buy a pennesula home in a generation.
 
Remember. There is no recession. There will not be a real estate crash. 87000 new irs agents were hired to audit 800 billionaires who are already audited every year. The inflation reduction act reduces inflation.
 
Why do you do audits on middle class and poorer people

Because that is the most vulnerable and pliable

When a IRS agent shows up st your house tge average American pisses their pants

They create a aura of fear

The guns they will now be carrying will be another layer of intimidation

This is not to collect more money

The purpose is to strike fear and assure compliance of the majority of Americans as the
Democratic Party and left are going for a single party government

The average left wing liberal Democrat and Clueless Republican on here is clueless about the
end game and final destination this crap is taking us to

I get sick on ny stomach when the Republicans get in power and do nothing to crush this march to tyranny

Every day when i pray i include a God help us because i see no savior in the Republican Party except maybe Trump and DeSantis

That is why they are do feared and demonized

They see it too

A dumbass Republican like Mitt Romney is clueless

Again help us cause we are a crap show right now on protecting our democracy
 
This was in no way directed at you. It was pure sarcasm.

The media has told us we can no longer point to 2 consecutive quarters of declining GDP as a recession.

I included Cris because he runs a very successful business, yet we have a "leader of the free world" who can't walk up a set of stairs without falling, or ride a bike without falling over.

I was getting what you were doing

The sad part is that the people on here who will argue that we are not in a financial recession is only a small number compared to tge massive number of mindless zombies who believe anything instead of having an open mind and thinking gor themselves

Same in housing as prices will remain high but affordibility will make many people homeless.
Count on decent affordable housing becoming a luxury to middle class Americans.

It is truly a scary time in America if the November election does not bring reason to our government
 
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