New-Home Sales Plunge 14.9%; High Interest Rates Cited - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

New-Home Sales Plunge 14.9%; High Interest Rates Cited

Share via
Associated Press

New-home sales plummeted 14.9% in May, the biggest decline in more than five years, as a sharp spike in mortgage rates drove first-time home buyers out of the market, the government reported Monday.

The Commerce Department said new single-family homes were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 616,000 units in May, while the median price of a new home shot up to a record $106,800.

Analysts attributed the jump in home prices to the fact that many first-time buyers, who normally purchase less-expensive homes, had been driven out of the market by the higher mortgage rates. With fewer low-priced homes sold, both the median and average sales prices increased.

Advertisement

Unless there is a downward revision in later reports, the May increase marked the first time the median price of a new home has topped $100,000. The May increase put prices 9.1% higher than in April, when the median price of a new home was $97,900.

The median price means that half the homes sold for more and half for less.

The average price of a home rose as well, climbing 10.3% to a record $129,600 in May.

The 14.9% drop in sales followed a slight 1% increase in April and was the biggest monthly sales decline since a 19.5% plunge in January, 1982.

The May decline, which left the annual sales rate at its lowest point since December, 1984, was blamed on a big jump in mortgage rates.

Advertisement

The May decline in sales followed a revised 1% April increase, which initially had been reported at a much stronger 7.6% gain.

For May, sales were down substantially in all parts of the country, led by a 34.5% plunge in the Midwest, which left sales there at an annual rate of 78,000 units.

Sales were down 12.5% in the South, which accounted for almost half of the new homes sold last year, dropping the annual rate to 253,000 units in that area.

Advertisement

In the West, sales fell 9.5% to an annual rate of 181,000 units, and in the Northeast, sales were off 10.3% to a rate of 105,000 units.

Advertisement