Current:Home > NewsNew home sales jumped in 2023. Why that's a good sign for buyers (and sellers) in 2024. -Secure Growth Solutions
New home sales jumped in 2023. Why that's a good sign for buyers (and sellers) in 2024.
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-08 07:45:30
So is this bottom in the housing market?
Last week, National Association of Realtors told us that existing-home sales for December and all of 2023 tumbled to new lows. On Thursday, though, the Census Bureau's preliminary report for December showed new home sales jumped 8% from November and grew 4% from 2022 to 2023.
To be sure, new home sales are just a fraction of existing home sales in the U.S., and new homes sales can fluctuate significantly from month to month.
Still, the 668,000 new homes purchased in 2023 ends a two-year decline. It also talks to two key concerns that have bogged down the market struggling with higher mortgage rates: too few buyers and too few homes for sale.
Home sales fall from pandemic highs
Unable to view our graphics? Click here to see them.
Mortgage rates have been central to the housing market's swoon. Since 2022, the number of homes sold began tumbling after the Fed announced its plans to raise interest rates in an effort to tame 40-year-high inflation. That ultimately led to higher mortgage rates and fewer and fewer homes sold.
Freddie Mac offered some more good news for the housing market on Thursday: Mortgage rates remained more than a percentage point below October's recent high. The average 30-year mortgage rate ticked up to 6.69% this week.
How mortgage rates rose as the Fed increased interest rates
A strong open-house weekend
These lower mortgage rates may be having a bigger pschological affect on potential buyers, too.
Denise Warner with Washington Fine Properties has sold homes in the Washington, D.C., metro area for 26 years. She noticed just last weekend a different energy among perspective buyers at her open house.
"I was astonished to see so many people, and the reports from my colleagues were the same," Warner said. "When they had their open houses, they stopped counting" the number of visitors because the homes were so full.
"People may have been waiting to see what happens with interest rates, the general economy, what the Fed is doing," Warner said. "With rates settling in the 6s right now, it's bringing a level of comfort to people."
Real estate association expects a stronger 2024
NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun in December predicted an upswing in the housing market. Yun and the NAR aren't expecting the housing market to hit the highs it did in 2020 with interest rates at multi-decade lows. They do expect the market to fall a bit short of 2022's sales at 4.71 million homes.
“The demand for housing will recover from falling mortgage rates and rising income,” Yun said. He said he expects housing inventory to jump 30% because higher mortgage rates caused home owners to delay selling.
NAR has singled out the D.C. market and nine others as the most likely to outperform other U.S. areas because of higher pent-up demand.
Markets NAR expects to perform best in 2024
New home prices fell in 2023
Another encouraging sign for buyers in Thursday's new home sales report: an overall decline in sale prices in 2023. The average price of a new home fell 5.3% to $511,100 while the median sales price fell 6.6% to $427,400.
How home sale prices increased after the pandemic
Mortgage rates contributed the most to new home buyers' monthly mortgage payments in recent months. But, the median sales price for all types of home have crept up by thousands of dollars each year since the pandemic.
The NAR found this fall that U.S. homes hadn't been this unaffordable since 30-year mortgage rates hovered around 14% in 1984.
veryGood! (122)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker's Baby Boy Rocky Follows in Dad's Footsteps in Rare Photo
- No twerking. No drinking. No smoking. But plenty of room for Jesus at this Christian nightclub
- Men's March Madness bubble winners, losers: No doubt, Gonzaga will make NCAA Tournament
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Karol G says she's doing 'very well' after her plane reportedly made an emergency landing
- The 'Star-Spangled Banner': On National Anthem Day, watch 5 notable performances
- Georgia teen critically injured after police trade gunfire with a group near Six Flags
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- As an opioids scourge devastates tribes in Washington, lawmakers advance a bill to provide relief
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- 4 new astronauts head to the International Space Station for a 6-month stay
- Q&A: Maryland’s First Chief Sustainability Officer Takes on the State’s Climate and Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Goals
- Mi abuela es un meme y es un poco por mi culpa
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Kyle Larson again wins at Las Vegas to keep Chevrolet undefeated on NASCAR season
- At least 2 wounded in shooting outside high school basketball game near Kansas City
- Georgia’s largest county is still repairing damage from January cyberattack
Recommendation
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Police charge man after pregnant Amish woman slain in Pennsylvania
Mi abuela es un meme y es un poco por mi culpa
Freddie Mercury's London home for sale after being preserved for 30 years: See inside
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Photos show train cars piled up along riverbank after Norfolk Southern train derails
What to know about viewing and recording the solar eclipse with your cellphone camera
Kyle Larson again wins at Las Vegas to keep Chevrolet undefeated on NASCAR season