U.S. Housing: Hopes For A Turnaround?

 | Jan 23, 2019 12:37AM ET

Amidst the government shutdown, third-party housing numbers are one of the few data sets we are still receiving. Existing home sales offer further warning signals, but elsewhere, we may be seeing signs of stabilization and even a potential recovery.h3 A stall becomes a slowdown/h3

A healthy housing market normally equates to a healthy economy. Rising housing transactions are typically associated with rising residential construction activity and retail sales – particularly in furniture and furnishing components, as well as the building materials and garden equipment sector. However, over the past 12 months, we have seen a clear slowing in both existing and new home sales with the stock of unsold supply on the market picking up, too. For new homes, it currently stands at an eight-year high of 7.4 months of sales. Tuesday's steep fall in existing home sales for December to 4.99 million annualized - the lowest since the November 2015 blip - means that it now takes an average 46 days to sell a property.

House prices have tentatively started to respond to this with the national annual rate of inflation slowing to 5% in October versus a peak of 6.8% seen in March last year. The slowdown appears particularly pronounced in cities that have experienced construction booms in recent years, such as the major West Coast cities. This has led to fears that a weakening housing market could become another headwind for the U.S. economy, prompting slower economic activity and a more cautious approach to interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve.

h3 U.S. home sales and U.S. S&P Case-Schiller house price inflation (3M (NYSE:MMM) annualized)/h3