Skip to content
Trending
August 8, 2025Wall Street analysts rush to Eli Lilly’s defense but investors aren’t listening yet August 17, 2025Why Wall Street kept sending the S&P 500, Nasdaq to fresh records this week April 29, 2025SoFi CEO says fintech bank is bringing back crypto investing December 10, 2025Oracle’s stock slides 7% on revenue miss even as AI backlog soars March 23, 2025U.S. households are running out of emergency funds as pandemic cash runs out, inflation takes its toll May 30, 2025Caviar and privacy: Airlines’ business-class wars are here September 29, 2025Labor Dept. won’t release Friday’s key jobs report, other data if government shuts down February 7, 2025How one ETF provider is trying to help investors cut exposure to Magnificent 7 stocks August 3, 2025U.S. added just 73,000 jobs in July and numbers for prior months were revised much lower August 7, 2025American adds Budapest, Prague and Buenos Aires flights for summer 2026
  Monday 8 June 2026
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
  Business  New home sales soar 20% in August to a three-year high
Business

New home sales soar 20% in August to a three-year high

AdminAdmin—September 24, 20250

New home sales jump

Sales of newly built homes rose a much larger-than-expected 20.5% in August compared with July to the highest level since January 2022, according to the U.S. Census. It is also the largest one-month gain since August 2022. Sales were 15.4% higher than August 2024.

This count is based on people out shopping in August and signing deals, when the average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage was higher than it is today. That rate started August at 6.63%, according to Mortgage News Daily, and didn’t really move much during the month.

The sharp decline in rates began in September, when it fell to a three-year low of 6.13% the day before the Federal Reserve cut its lending rate, and then moved higher to where it is now at 6.37%.

Given that rates hadn’t fallen yet, it’s curious that August sales jumped so high. Part of the answer may be in the survey itself.

More stories

‘That’s cute’: Frontier CEO fires back at United CEO declaring discount airline model dead

September 17, 2025

JPMorgan Chase tops quarterly expectations as Dimon says U.S. economy faces ‘considerable turbulence’

April 11, 2025

Lululemon shares drop more than 10% as CEO says inflation, economic concerns are weighing on spending

March 28, 2025

Why it suddenly feels like every fast-food restaurant has fun, flavored drinks

March 24, 2025

“We were expecting a gain but not that large,” said Robert Dietz, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders. “Always important to remember the margin of error for new home sales is large. We’ll need to wait for revisions next month and the September data point to see if this is smoothed out.”

Get Property Play directly to your inbox

CNBC’s Property Play with Diana Olick covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, delivered weekly to your inbox.

Subscribe here to get access today.

Homebuilder analyst Ivy Zelman of Zelman & Associates said the number was “directionally right, but the magnitude was way too high.”

Zelman conducts her own survey, which has a higher sample size spanning 15% of homebuilders, and it showed a sales increase of 6% year over year, she said.

While builders have talked a lot about cutting prices and incentives, the median price of a new home sold in August was $413,500, in increase of 1.9% year over year. In a separate survey on builder sentiment from the National Association of Home Builders, 39% of builders reported cutting prices in September, up from 37% in August and the highest percentage in the post-Covid period.

New home sales were strongest in the Northeast, where overall new construction is low, so swings can be large. It was also strong in the South, where homebuilding is busiest. Sales, while higher, were weakest in the West, where prices are highest.

“While a volatile figure each month and always best to smooth out, I have to believe that the elevated level of home builder incentives was the main catalyst for the large upside surprise to new home sales,” wrote Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer of One Point BFG Wealth Partner.  “And we’ll, of course, see the impact of lower mortgage rates when the September figure comes out, but keep in mind, if mortgage rates continue down … builders will then reduce the pace at which they are implementing incentives and thus possibly offsetting the benefit of lower mortgage rates for new homes.”

Strong sales took inventory down to a 7.4-month supply in August from a nine-month supply in July, a nearly 18% drop. Single-family housing starts and permits slowed in August both from July and from August of last year. This would seem to indicate that builders expected slower sales.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

Powell says slowing labor market prompted rate cut, sees ‘challenging situation’ ahead
Micron beats on earnings as company sales rise 46% on AI boom
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Business

American Airlines no longer lets basic economy flyers earn miles

December 18, 20250
Business

Delta president Glen Hauenstein, who helped turn airline into industry profit leader, to retire in February

December 17, 20250
Business

Consumers are feeling gloomy about the economy. Here’s why they’re spending anyway

December 16, 20250
Load more
Read also
Earnings

Google cloud growth tops Microsoft and Amazon as all three beat estimates on AI demand

May 2, 20260
Finance

Visa says new AI shopping tool has helped customers with hundreds of transactions

December 18, 20250
Economy

Trust these numbers? Economists see a lot of flaws in delayed CPI report showing downward inflation

December 18, 20250
Earnings

Nike tops earnings estimates but shares fall as China sales plunge, tariffs hit profits

December 18, 20250
Business

American Airlines no longer lets basic economy flyers earn miles

December 18, 20250
Finance

Billionaire fund manager Ron Baron praises beaten-up financial stock whose new CEO he compares to Jamie Dimon

December 17, 20250
Load more
    © 2022, All Rights Reserved.
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Law
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions