US Home Sales to Reach 10-Year High in 2017

In the first quarter of this year, sales of existing homes on a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) reached 5.62 million, their highest level in 10 years. If recent projections materialize, existing home sales will top that by the end of this year with a SAAR of 5.64 million, a 3.5% year-over-year increase. Sales are expected to rise an additional 2.8% in 2018 to a SAAR of 5.8 million.

In addition to more sales, prices are projected to rise as well, by an average of around 5% nationally. The projected increase for 2018 is 3.5%.

The data were presented by Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors (NAR), at a Friday conference on residential real estate.

Yun said:

The housing market has exceeded expectations ever since the election, despite depressed inventory and higher mortgage rates. The combination of the stock market being at record highs, 16 million new jobs created since 2010, pent-up household formation and rising consumer confidence are giving more households the assurance and ability to purchase a home.

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New home construction has been more problematic, according to Yun:

We have been under the 50-year average of single-family housing starts for 10 years now. Limited lots, labor shortages, tight construction lending and higher lumber costs are impeding the building industry's ability to produce more single-family homes. There's little doubt first-time buyer participation would improve and the homeownership rate would rise if there was simply more inventory.

Jonathan Spader of Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies offered mixed news on the nation's homeownership rate, which has dropped from a peak of 69.2% at the end of 2004 to 63.6% at the end of the first quarter of 2017. Spader expects a homeownership rate of 61% to 65.1% by 2025. He said:

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Stagnant household incomes, rising rental costs, student loan debt and limited supply have all contributed to slower purchasing activity. When the homeownership rate stabilizes, there will be an increase in homeowner households. Young and minority households' ability to reach the market will play a big role in how much the actual rate can rise in coming years.

Mark Calabria, chief economist and assistant to Vice President Mike Pence, talked about prolonged weak productivity and the low labor participation rate, which he characterized as the primary reasons that the current economic expansion is the slowest since the end of World War II. Calabria said: