Skip to main content

Pending Home Sales Rise Over Six Percent in May

Jun 30, 2014

Pending home sales rose sharply in May, with lower mortgage rates and increased inventory accelerating the market, according to the National Association of Realtors. All four regions of the country saw increases in pending sales, with the Northeast and West experiencing the largest gains. The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, increased 6.1 percent to 103.9 in May from 97.9 in April, but still remains 5.2 percent below May 2013 (109.6). May’s 6.1 percent increase was the largest month-over-month gain since April 2010 (9.6 percent), when first-time home buyers rushed to sign purchase contracts before a popular tax credit program ended. Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, expects improving home sales in the second half of the year. “Sales should exceed an annual pace of five million homes in some of the upcoming months behind favorable mortgage rates, more inventory and improved job creation,” he said. “However, second-half sales growth won’t be enough to compensate for the sluggish first quarter and will likely fall below last year’s total.” Despite the positive gains in signed contracts last month, Yun cautions that affordability and access to credit is still an area of concern for first-time home buyers, who accounted for only 27 percent of existing-home sales1 in May and typically carry student loan debt and lower credit scores. “The flourishing stock market the last few years has propelled sales in the higher price brackets, while sales for homes under $250,000 are 10 percent behind last year’s pace. Meanwhile, apartment rents are expected to rise eight percent cumulatively over the next two years because of tight availability,” said Yun. “Solid income growth and a slight easing in underwriting standards are needed to encourage first-time buyer participation, especially as renting becomes less affordable.” The PHSI in the Northeast jumped 8.8 percent to 86.3 in May, and is now 0.2 percent above a year ago. In the Midwest the index rose 6.3 percent to 105.4 in May, but is still 6.6 percent below May 2013. Pending home sales in the South advanced 4.4 percent to an index of 117.0 in May, and is 2.9 percent below a year ago. The index in the West rose 7.6 percent in May to 95.4, but remains 11.1 percent below May 2013. Yun expects existing-homes sales to be down 2.8 percent this year to 4.95 million, compared to 5.1 million sales of existing homes in 2013. The national median existing-home price is projected to grow between five and six percent this year and in the range of four to five percent in 2015.
About the author
Published
Jun 30, 2014
MBA Proposes New Ginnie Mae Security To Avoid Next Doomsday

Nonbank originators and servicers face massive risks of liquidity stress in the next economic downturn

Dec 12, 2024
MCT Charges Ahead With FICO 10T Adoption

Despite industry-wide hesitancy, the leading loan trading platform plans to complete integration by mid-2025

Dec 12, 2024
Bank On Borrowers, Not Rate Predictions

Chasing rate forecasts wastes resources better spent on cold, hard business

Dec 10, 2024
Rocket Mortgage Sues HUD Over Regulatory, Enforcement Discrepancies

Rocket seeks dismissal of the DOJ's October lawsuit alleging the lender committed racial appraisal bias.

Dec 05, 2024
West Capital Lending Acquires Locally-Focused Brokerage, Red Tree Mortgage

The 2024 Broker Brawl reaffirmed West Capital's commitment as a relationship-focused lender

Dec 03, 2024
First FICO 10T-Backed MBS Issuance Achieved

Comprised of VA loans, the pool offers proof of concept for changes to be required by the FHFA by late 2025.

Dec 03, 2024