New Home Sales Rise in All Regions of Country But One

ARLINGTON, Va.—New-home sales rose 14% in September from August's downwardly revised rate of 702,000 annualized units to 800,000 units.

The figure marks the highest level of new home sales since March, said Curt Long, NAFCU’s chief economist and vice president of research.

"New home sales numbers can be volatile, though, as last month's number saw a 38,000 unit downward revision," he added. "Overall, tailwinds are still strong for new home sales, including low mortgage rates, increasing amounts of Millennials entering their prime homebuying years, a strengthening labor market, and tight existing home market pushing buyers into a new home."

Sales rose in three regions in September, with the Northeast rising 32.3%, followed by the South at 17.5% and the West, 8.5%. New home sales in the Midwestern U.S. were down 1.5% on the month. Compared to a year ago, sales fell in all census regions, but those numbers are still skewed by the boom in home sales after the lifting of COVID-19 lockdowns this time last year.

Average New Home Price Rises

Based on current month sales, there were 5.7 months of supply in September, down 0.8 months from August. The number of unsold homes left on the market was unchanged at 379,000 units representing a 32.5% increase from year-ago inventory levels.

The median new-home price, non-seasonally adjusted, rose up to $408,800.

"Rates have begun to rise but are unlikely to affect sales given supply is the larger problem with backlogs near a 15-year high," concluded Long. “NAFCU expects strong and steady new home sales through the rest of the year, but they are at the mercy of supply and resulting price increases.”

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