Pending Home Sales Jump In January

This morning the National Association of Realtors released the January data for their Pending Home Sales Index. Here is an excerpt from the latest press release:

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, had expected an increase in January home sales. “A change in Federal Reserve policy and the reopening of the government were very beneficial to the market,” he said. (more here)

The chart below gives us a snapshot of the index since 2001. The MoM came in at 4.6%, up from a 2.3% decrease last month. Investing.com had forecast an increase of 0.8%.

Pending Home Sales

 

Over this time frame, the US population has grown by 16.1%. For a better look at the underlying trend, here is an overlay with the nominal index and the population-adjusted variant. The focus is pending home sales growth since 2001.

Pending Home Sales Growth

 

The index for the most recent month is 19% below its all-time high in 2005. The population-adjusted index is 27% off its 2005 high.

Pending versus Existing Home Sales

The NAR explains that "because a home goes under contract a month or two before it is sold, the Pending Home Sales Index generally leads Existing Home Sales by a month or two." Here is a growth overlay of the two series. The general correlation, as expected, is close. And a close look at the numbers supports the NAR's assessment that their pending sales series is a leading index.

 

How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.