Mon, May 28, 2012, 7:42 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Builders group sees pickup in housing this year

Builders group forecasts improved US home sales, construction this year, bigger pickup in 2013

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The U.S. housing market will begin to mount a turnaround this year, building toward a solid recovery in 2013, according to a forecast issued Wednesday by the chief economist of a homebuilding industry trade group.

The outlook by National Association of Home Builders Chief Economist David Crowe calls for U.S. sales of new homes and single-family home construction to improve this year compared to 2011, when they hit record lows.

The forecast still leaves new home sales and construction well below the levels of a healthy housing market, however. That reflects the severity of the industry's downturn, and it suggests the housing market could be years away from full health.

"I'm looking at 2012 as sort of a ramping event to get a much more solid recovery in 2013," Crowe said in a telephone interview.

The economist, who presented his forecast at the trade association's annual conference in Orlando, Fla., sees sales of new, single-family homes climbing 19 percent this year to 360,000, up from 303,000 last year.

Next year, he expects those sales to rise by a whopping 40 percent to 505,000.

Even if the forecast proves true, that still leaves new home sales below the 700,000-a-year pace that economists say must be sold in a healthy economy.

Crowe's outlook also hinges on unemployment staying below 8.5 percent and the economy adding more jobs. And he's assuming that tight mortgage-lending requirements will ease this year, enabling more homebuyers to qualify for financing.

Freddie Mac Chief Economist Frank Nothaft, who also issued a housing outlook at the NAHB conference, said he expects total home sales to grow between 2 percent to 5 percent this year, thanks in part to still-low mortgage interest rates. He anticipates the average rate on a 30-year mortgage will remain below 5 percent this year.

Many economists are expecting a brighter year for housing, citing positive economic data in recent months. The nation's gross domestic product expanded slightly last year. The nation has been steadily adding more jobs. And the national jobless rate has fallen from 9 percent as recently as September to 8.3 percent last month.

Still, the housing market has to come up from the deep trench it sank to in 2011.

Last year was the weakest year for single-family home construction on record. And sales of new homes sank to the lowest level on records going back a half-century.

High unemployment, uncertainty over the economy and concerns that home prices could fall further kept many prospective home buyers on the sidelines. Others opted to buy cheap foreclosures rather than new homes.

While new homes sales represent a fraction of the housing market, they have an outsize impact on the economy. Each home built creates an average of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in tax revenue, according to the NAHB.

In 2011, builders began work on 606,900 homes. That was slightly better than in the previous two years, but only about half the number that economists equate with healthy markets.

Crowe's forecast calls for builders to break ground on 706,000 homes this year, an increase of 16 percent. He sees that rising 27 percent next year to 895,000.

Looking only at single-family homes, which account for roughly 70 percent of the market, Crowe projects construction will be started on 499,000 homes this year. That represents a 16 percent gain from last year. He anticipates a 32 percent jump in 2013.

Sales of previously occupied, single-family homes improved slightly last year, rising to 2.7 percent to 3.81 million. Crowe is expecting they will climb about 15 percent this year to 4.38 million homes, and about 23 percent next year to 5.36 million.

 

11 comments

  • What Rabbit  •  3 months ago
    How about selling the empties, and all of the forclosures first, before cutting all the trees down and shipping them off to the Orient.
  • bill  •  3 months ago
    What a joke been in the constuction business over 32 years this s the worst I have ever seen also have freinds in the landscape business witch is just as bad 3 out of 20 guys are I know are still working the rest laid off ,some for 2 years or more and lost there uemployment.The main reason things got this bad is the high cost of all constuction material and diesel fuel more then doubled . A home cost more to build then it,s worth untill that changes and costs go down things are gettin even worse.
    • bill 3 months ago
      Well Annonymous I hope they serve egg mcmuffins there you can get 2 for 3 bucks at the micky d,s near me thast alot cheaper then a gallon of gasoline
  • Wake up!  •  3 months ago
    The people who were living in the now foreclosed homes and the people who were buying the new house, where are they now?They can't have all moved back in with Mommy & Daddy or be on the street or even gone back to Mexico. The US population hasn't shrunken. Was there a masss abduction by aliens? Did the rapture occur and no one noticed?
  • ed  •  Ocala, Florida  •  3 months ago
    who's going to buy these homes? we still have over 25 million unemployed and the number is still growing.Today pepsi co laying off 8700 more workers,good luck selling these homes!
    • ernest 3 months ago
      The number is not 25 million. It is 23,165,912 and is going down. Going down by 5,570 a day.
  • joe  •  3 months ago
    What was he saying at the beginning of 2011? Was he predicting the worst year in new home sales since they started keeping records?? Isn't this like the NAR making predictions? I feel this is awfully self serving. He doesn't have homebuilding back at healthy level for a few years.
  • 46thPres  •  Collinsville, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Forecasters see an improvement in new home construction in 2012.
    They expect an increase of 2.7% over the level of 2011 which will make 2012 the 2nd lowest in recorded history.
  • Andy  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 months ago
    Keep eating the bitter melon.
    Looks to me like the pick up is already well underway last year.
    Existing home median price was $156,100 in Feb 2011 and now existing home median price is $164,500 in Dec 2011.
    • bill 3 months ago
      Do you have any idea how much it cost to maintain a back hoe and front end loader and how many gallons of diesel fuel and a truck and trailer to transport it at over $4 dollars a gallon then dig a foundation and grade the property?New homes have become a dinosaur blame the speculators on wall street for making building a new home more the it is worth.
  • Andy  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 months ago
    Home prices are up 5.4% in the latest 10 months. And inventory is improved (reduced) by over 21% in the past year and significantly more homes are selling per month this year than in the prior year.
    This is probably happening because rents are up by 8% from the prior year. Unemployment is now improving too.
    • 46thPres 3 months ago
      Housing inventory only dropped because banks were forced to stop foreclosures.
      in the 4th QTR of 2011 over 2.7 millions foreclosure processes were started by lending institutions. Those take an average of 190 days to process. That in simple terms means that starting in the 2nd quarter of 2012 forclosures will begin to rise again, housing prices will decline and inventory will balloon.
  • merryprankstersmagicbus  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    they will build 10 homes this year compared to 5 built last year.
    • bill 3 months ago
      New homes can only be affored by the wealthy,the average American can not afford to pay to have a home built that cost more to build then it,s worth.
  • justifinal  •  Brush Prairie, Washington  •  3 months ago
    I am not nearly as smart as this guy, and my math ain't too good. But if they are hoping for a 19% growth in sales (very optomistic) and that translates into 360,000 sold homes. But they are going to start 499,000 homes this year??? Lucky we don't have a lot of unsold used homes :)
  • No QE3!  •  3 months ago
    The U.S. housing market will begin to mount a turnaround this year, building toward a solid recovery in 2013...not if the Republicans have anything to do w/ it.
 
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