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    New-home purchases fall, 2011 worst ever for sales

    US new-home sales fell in December to make 2011 worst sales year on record

    Fantasy Finance

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Fewer Americans bought new homes in December. The decline made 2011 the worst year for new-home sales on records dating back nearly half a century.

    The Commerce Department said Thursday new-home sales fell 2.2 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 307,000. The pace is less than half the 700,000 that economists say must be sold in a healthy economy.

    About 302,000 new homes were sold last year. That's less than the 323,000 sold in 2010, making last year's sales the worst on records dating back to 1963. And it coincides with a report last week that said 2011 was the weakest year for single-family home construction on record.

    The median sales prices for new homes dropped in December to $210,300. Builders continued to slash price to stay competitive in the depressed market.

    Still, sales of new homes rose in the final quarter of 2011, supporting other signs of a slow turnaround that began at the end of the year.

    Sales of previously occupied homes rose in December for a third straight month. Mortgage rates have never been lower. Homebuilders are slightly more hopeful because more people are saying they might consider buying this year. And home construction picked up in the final quarter of last year.

    "Although this decline was unexpected, it does not change the story that housing has likely bottomed," said Jennifer H. Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.

    Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, said easier lending requirements, historically low mortgage rates and improved hiring all point to consistent, albeit slow, rises in sales in the coming months.

    "A sustained rise in new home sales is imminent," he said. "Homebuilders say so too, and they should know."

    Hiring is critical to a housing rebound. The unemployment rate fell in December to its lowest level in nearly three years after the sixth straight month of solid job growth.

    Economists caution that housing is a long way from fully recovering. Builders have stopped working on many projects because it's been hard for them to get financing or to compete with cheaper resale homes. For many Americans, buying a home remains too big a risk more than four years after the housing bubble burst.

    Though new-home sales represent less than 10 percent 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 National Association of Home Builders.

    A key reason for the dismal 2011 sales is that builders must compete with foreclosures and short sales — when lenders accept less for a house than what is owed on the mortgage

    Builders ended 2011 with a third straight year of dismal home construction and the worst on record for single-family home building. But in a hopeful sign, single-family home construction, which makes up 70 percent of the market, increased in each of the last three months.

     
    • dan  •  Fleetwood, Pennsylvania  •  1 month 0 days ago
      The Democrats have aborted 25 million babies that could now be contributing to our country and buying new houses but they are gone forever.
    • dan  •  Fleetwood, Pennsylvania  •  1 month 0 days ago
      Big surprise that housing market is again getting ready to crash even further. Obama is closing a local Coal fired power plant indirectly with onerous regulations. They will say only a few jobs are affected but they are wrong. All the power plant employees are affected, the coal employees, maintenance personnel, outside sales, outside contractors, local parts suppliers, electric customers will see rate increases, with rate increases the local businesses will not be as competitive, the cost to replace the plant generation capacity will cost more as well, and I could go on. This is just one small example of the negative impact that Obama's oneous regulations are causing in a thousand places across the US every day. He needs to go.
    • dan  •  Fleetwood, Pennsylvania  •  1 month 0 days ago
      As an appraiser I am seeing prices continue to decline and sales continue to decline. Obama is absolutely KILLING the housing market.
    • anonymous  •  Modesto, California  •  1 month 8 days ago
      Housing contractors are hiring more people because they have already trashed their skilled workers. They are hiring unskilled laborers to do the work that skilled craftsmen once did after years of learning their trade. Many of these unskilled workers are also undocumented, and have no recourse when they are taken advantage of with poor wages, no benefits, no job security, and little regard for safety and construction standards. Hope you don't buy one of these homes that are built by people who don't really know what they are doing!
    • CrnaLegia  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 months ago
      Houses are primarily not investment assets, there are a roof to live under. If you use them for investment, bite it! That's the good old american free market!
      • Lia 4 months ago
        Also one of hardest states to get a job in. I know this is gonna sound like spam to you, but there is a way to create an additional stream of income--in any state. No selling, no inventory, no shipping, no licenses, no RE, no credit or loan required. i work from home--with top-tier companies. All US & Canada. Anyone can do it. create wealth spokane (at) gmail. Twitter: createwealthwa
      • wakeup 4 months ago
        Thanks, keep informing people. The average person has no real brain that operates independently of what the media feeds them. Everything in a house deteriorates just like vehicles. Land prices, on the other hand can be treated more like assets.
    • george  •  Mashpee, Massachusetts  •  4 months ago
      THE ASSESSED VALUE OF MY HOUSE JUST DROPPED 12% FROM LAST YEAR. NOT A GOOD DAY FOR US.
      • CrnaLegia 4 months ago
        So what? A house is not an asset, it is a roof to live under. If you juse it as an investment asset, bite it! That's the market.
      • j 4 months ago
        After they steal your money by printing more money they will steal your home. Thomas Jefferson had is right on the banks and the privately held "federal" reserve.

        "I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies . . . If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] . . . will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered . . . The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs." -- Thomas Jefferson -- The Debate Over The Recharter Of The Bank Bill, (1809)
      • wakeup 4 months ago
        Why did you pay too much in the first place? You wanted to be part of the housing bubble to make it bad on all the responsible people wanting home prices to be reasonable? The ratio of median home price to income is over 4 today, still 30-40% too high based on the ratio of 2.5 to 3 that held for a couple of decades. You want to keep this wealth divide growing larger? Think deeper beyond your personal plight - no one forced you to overpay.
    • Bucko  •  4 months ago
      Said it before...we have a housing problem, we have a jobs CRISIS. No job, no house payment. No payment, foreclosure. Foreclosure, hurts value of all of our houses. We all take a hit except TBTF banksters who keep getting the multi billion dollar, taxpayer funded bonus checks. Socialism for the rich, crapitalism for the working class.
      • Law-abiding Citizen 4 months ago
        When the Federal, State and County governments TAKE over half my income … I call that a societal crisis. WHERE is the "FAIRNESS".
    • mmmmooooo  •  4 months ago
      You mean the new job "growth" @ $8.00/hr won't get me a house?
      • Mark 4 months ago
        It will if you have a huge down payment!!
      • NOTaNTHERlikeME 3 months ago
        Fixing this problem is as simple as showing the working class in the U.S. how to become financially self sufficient instead of encouraging them to continue chasing jobs. CHART YOUR OWN COURSE AND UNPLUG FROM THE CORPORATE MATRIX THAT IS SUCKING THE LIFE OUT OF YOU. I have found a goldmine for me and my family and there is still plenty of room for others to dig. http://ceburns.mymonavie.com CLICK JOIN!!!
    • James  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
      Kinda hard to buy a house working at McDonalds or equivalent low paying job; these are the kinds of jobs that are being filled, bringing the unemployment numbers "down".
      • Robert Johnson 4 months ago
        Well, yeah, that and the fact that the unemployment data is manipulated downward...
      • Law-abiding Citizen 4 months ago
        Where have you been? … During the "everyone deserves a house" boom, even those flipping burgers were taking out loans they could never hope to service. Reality doesn't change, it's a question of perception.
      • j 4 months ago
        Wait until the republicans put their policy of removing the minimum wage in place.
    • Da Bears  •  4 months ago
      Just might have something to do with the millions of used homes up for grabs at a huge discount???
    • Stella Jones  •  4 months ago
      GOOD - NOW STOP BUILDING THEM - this is not complicated, we overbuilt by MILLIONS for a few years and now need to STOP BUILDING for a few years
    • Magron  •  De Witt, New York  •  4 months ago
      Gee..I'm amazed... 20+ years of offshoring any job that pays above minimum wage and I'm sure the banks are actually eager to write 4% mortgages and cripple their income for the next 15 to 30 years. How COULD this be happening? Oh, my!
    • stephen jankins  •  4 months ago
      How are the following two articles showing up on the same page on Yahoo!

      "New-home purchases fall, 2011 worst ever for sales." and "Home sales at 11 month high."

      I guess home sales are simeoltaneously rising and falling to new highs.
    • Dennis  •  Fort Myers, Florida  •  4 months ago
      How can this be, during the state of the union Obama told us he fixed Housing? AP must be part of a right wing conspiracy because Obama would never lie to us. Wink wink
    • Bongo Drums  •  4 months ago
      Unintended byproduct of the Fed saying they are planning on keeping rates at zero until 2014 is that now potential homebuyers have zero pressure to buy. Mortgage rates aren't going anywhere except maybe down a little more.
    • Steve  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 months ago
      I would love to buy a house but they wont loan me any money because my job went over seas.
    • ee  •  4 months ago
      What last week constrution was up stocks up on new constrution what is this all about? building rental units is not a good sign of the times.
    • UGLY KID  •  Toms River, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
      But My job at McDonald's did not qualify me for a Mc'Mansion.....
    • Traderpro2003  •  4 months ago
      Ahead of the Bell: US home sales likely up
      Haven't we been hearing this same rubbish propaganda since 2008?

      Reality: New-home purchases fall, 2011 worst ever for sales

      When do the trials begin for fraud, plundering and financial genocide of the middle class?
    • Law-abiding Citizen  •  4 months ago
      Perhaps the Government would do better supporting those who make wise decisions instead of those "in need".

      I have ALWAYS received better results by backing people with common sense who have long-term goals than taking chances (gambling) on those those who paycheck-to-paycheck or can't support themselves without aid. In my experience, 80% of the former usually pan out while 80% of the latter fail.

      You get what you reward … what else do you expect when you reward failure?

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