HomeContributorsFundamental AnalysisExisting Home Sales Pull Back from 10-Year High in February

Existing Home Sales Pull Back from 10-Year High in February

After rising to the highest level since 2007 in January, existing home sales fell by 3.7% m/m to 5.48 million (annualized) in February. The headline print was slightly weaker than market expectations which called for a 2.5% drop to 5.55 million.

The decline was concentrated in the single family segment where transactions fell by 3.0% to 4.89 million. Sales in the smaller condo/co-op segment retreated by a sharper 9.2% to 590 thousand.

On a regional basis, sales activity declined across most regions, pulling back in the Northeast (-13.8%), Midwest (-7.0%) and West (-3.1%), while a modest gain was recorded in the South (1.3%). Despite the pull back, activity remained higher than year-ago levels across the board.

The inventory of homes available for sale, while increasing 4.2% to 1.75 million on the month, remained 6.4% below year-ago level. The low supply of homes is pressuring up home prices, with the median home price accelerating to 7.7% y/y in February from 6.4% in the prior month.

First time homebuyers accounted for 32% of sales – down 1 percentage point from last month but up 3pp from year-ago.

Key Implications

While the pullback in activity is disappointing, it was not a surprise. The post-election rise in interest rates pulled forward some contract-signing and was bound to eventually weigh on sales activity as the initial rush dissipated. Demand for homes in February was also tempered by robust home price growth and very-low inventory levels – the latter being at a multiyear low, having fallen for nearly two years.

Sales activity is likely to remain relatively flat over the near-term, as the aforementioned factors continue to weigh on the housing market – a narrative corroborated by falling pending home sales data.

Still, the story is brighter over the longer-run as increasingly solid fundamentals – highlighted by robust job gains and rising wage growth which are both pulling more workers from the sidelines – should continue to buoy demand. Additional supply from rising new home building as well that of existing homes – as current owners increasingly believe it is a good time to sell a home to cash in on past price gains – will also help boost activity and alleviate some of the price pressures on existing home prices over the medium term.

TD Bank Financial Group
TD Bank Financial Grouphttp://www.td.com/economics/
The information contained in this report has been prepared for the information of our customers by TD Bank Financial Group. The information has been drawn from sources believed to be reliable, but the accuracy or completeness of the information is not guaranteed, nor in providing it does TD Bank Financial Group assume any responsibility or liability.

Featured Analysis

Learn Forex Trading