3 Numbers: U.S. Consumer Confidence To Hold Near 17-Year High

 | Apr 25, 2017 06:33AM ET

  • New-home sales in the US are expected to ease in March
  • US Consumer Confidence Index on track to dip, but remain close to 17-year high
  • EUR/USD jumped to a five-month high after the French election on Sunday
  • The US housing market is in focus again today with the release of data on new-home sales for March. We’ll also see the April update of the US Consumer Confidence Index. Meanwhile, the euro will be closely monitored following EUR/USD's initial surge following France’s presidential voting on Sunday.

    US: New Home Sales (1400 GMT): Sales of existing homes jumped to the highest level in more than 10 years in March, the National Association of Realtors reported last week. The news suggests that the housing market is set to provide a second-quarter lift for the economy after what’s expected to be a weak rise in first-quarter growth in the government’s preliminary GDP release on Friday.

    “The early returns so far this spring buying season look very promising as a rising number of households dipped their toes into the market and were successfully able to close on a home last month,” NAR’s chief economist said last week.

    Will today’s update on sales of newly built homes provide more support for expecting that the appetite for housing will heat up in Q2? The relatively cautious outlook doesn’t look promising. Econoday.com’s consensus forecast sees new-home sales easing to an annualised rate of 584,000 for March, down from 592,000 in the previous month. The estimate translates into a middling level of sales vs. recent history.

    But bulls are quick to point out that the lion’s share of real estate transactions are in existing home sales. That leaves room for thinking that an unimpressive update on new homes today isn’t fatal for anticipating economic support from housing in Q2.