Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:09 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Contract signings for US homes up in November

Contract signings for US homes up 7 percent in November, highest since April 2010

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The number of Americans who signed contracts to buy homes in November rose to the highest level in a year and a half.

The best reading on pending homes sales since a federal home-buying tax credit expired appeared to encourage traders on Wall Street.

Still, the National Association of Realtors cautioned that a growing number of buyers are canceling their contracts at the last minute, making the gauge less reliable.

The Realtors group said Thursday that its index of sales agreements jumped 7.3 percent last month to a reading of 100.1.

A reading of 100 is considered healthy. The last time the index was that high was in April 2010, one month before the tax credit expired.

Stocks rose after the index was released. The Dow Jones industrial average gained more than 70 points in morning trading, and broader indexes also increased.

Contract signings usually indicate where the housing market is headed. There's a one- to two-month lag between a signed contract and a completed deal.

But a sale isn't final until a mortgage is closed and many are falling apart before that happens. One third of Realtors say they've had at least one contract scuttled in November and October, according to the Realtors' group. That's up from 18 percent in September.

Pierre Ellis, an analyst at Decision Economics, said potential buyers are "feeling comfortable with their personal situations and with the house-price trend." But the demand for homes is running into significant obstacles, he said, including tougher lending standards and bigger required down payments.

Homes are the most affordable they've been in decades. Long-term mortgage rates are at historic lows and prices in most metro areas have tumbled since late 2006.

Yet this year will likely be the worst year for new-home sales in history. Sales of previously occupied homes are just barely ahead of 2008's dismal figures — the worst yearly showing since 1997.

Americans are holding off buying a home for a number of reasons. High unemployment and weak job growth have deterred many potential buyers. Loans are harder to come by. Lenders are requiring bigger down payments and strong credit scores to qualify.

Even those with good credit and stable finances are hesitant to buy out of concern home prices will keep falling.

 

11 comments

  • GrayPanther  •  Portland, Oregon  •  4 months ago
    FHA down payment requirement is 3 1/2 percent. You can still get conventional loans with 5 % down. Loans with less than 20% down require the purchaser to pay for mortgage insurance for a period of years or until 20% equity is achieved.
    • Ed 4 months ago
      boy are you misinformed banks will not even consider 5% down if you don't have at least 20% to put down they won't even look at you. and you have to pay mortgage insurance reguardless of your down payment amount. what an idiot
  • who  •  5 months ago
    Where are the hundreds of comments that have been deleted outing the bad ethics of this article?
  • Ed  •  4 months ago
    contract signings up 7% big deal any body can sign a contract, and out of all those contracts maybe 1 or 2 contracts will get the financing the rest will get turned down.
  • Dumb Liberal  •  4 months ago
    this article is another 'Lewinsky' for Hussein Obummer... more lies to reelect a loser...
  • Greg  •  Port Orange, Florida  •  5 months ago
    All I have to say is B/S. More lies from the industry that created the problems in the realestate market to begin with. Watch house prices drop another 30 to 50% before all is said and done. And if that wasn't good enough, these very same thieves are playing a new game. They buy houses at rock bottom pricing (having inside info first), put in a small amount of equity(paint and cleaning), then turn around and sell the same property for twice what they originally paid for it. We don't have to worry about foreign entities destroying this country. It will be destroyed from within due to the greed and selfishness of corporate America!!!
  • retired in florida  •  4 months ago
    half of the #$%$ is not closing becausr at the last minute the banks want more money down or you have to pay a middle person
  • butweet II  •  4 months ago
    Goddam AP propaganda always makes me feel good............................
  • Mad  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  5 months ago
    I have been forced to buy. I have pateintly been waiting for prices to get back to realitly and I still do not belive we are there yet. However, rent is getting more expensive every year and now its cheaper to buy than to rent. I hope for the sake of our country that home prices crash further and the American dream will once again be attainable. Even if that means the price of the home I am currently buying crashes with it as I'm buying a place to LIVE in, not a place to sell to someone else for three times as much. Until then we will be hurded and slaughterd as usuall. Thank you landlords, investors, NAR, banks, and the U.S. government for destroying what made America great.
  • Mark  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  5 months ago
    The comment about requiring higher down payments was odd, they have not changed for many years.
  • sweetyfoxyz  •  5 months ago
    #$%$ jewish are deleting comments i think
    • who 5 months ago
      The only comment they seem open to publishing. What a weird experience to watch yahoo and AP discredit themselves.
  • H  •  West Chester, Pennsylvania  •  5 months ago
    Because banks who loan to buyers that are putting down less than 20% are putting their own money on the line. Loans that meet the 20% requirement they would be happy to do be cause that would not involve any of the bank's own money.Doing this from the beginning would have created less risk for the lenders and buyers would be less likely to walk away with bigger down payments.When you put 3% or even less when you had that Federal tax credits, who gave a #$%$ if they walked away from the mortgage. There's nothing to lose.
    • who 5 months ago
      If you ever buy a home you'll realize how unfounded your comment is.
 
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