Newsroom
Despite decline in April, new-home sales remain strong
New home sales dipped 5.9 percent from March's downwardly revised rate of 917,000 annualized units to 863,000 units in April. Sales were up 51.4 percent versus April 2020, according to data in a new Macro Data Flash report.
“Year-over-year numbers were still strong, but the next few months will be skewed by the COVID-19 lockdowns last year," said NAFCU’s chief economist and vice president of research, Curt Long. "The bright side of slowing sales is that the inventory-to-sales ratio is rising and nearing its highest point in a year. However, construction snags are slowing the progress. Homebuilders continue to struggle with a myriad of supply, labor, and cost issues.
"The increase in lumber prices, for instance, is adding $36,000 to the price of a new home. The construction backlog is mounting as the share of sales under construction rose to 42 percent, its highest level since 1999," Long added.
Sales rose in two regions in April, with the South rising 7.9 percent, followed by the West at 3.9 percent. The Northeast fell 13.7 percent while the Midwest dropped 8.3 percent.
Based on current month sales, there were 4.4 months of supply in April, up 0.4 months from March. The number of unsold homes left on the market was up to 316,000 units on the month. This represents a 1.6 percent reduction from year-ago inventory levels. The median new home price, non-seasonally adjusted, rose from $334,200 in March to $372,400 in April. April's prices are up 20.1 percent from a year ago.
“NAFCU expects new home sales to remain strong, but to be held back by supply and price issues that will take more time to unwind," Long concluded.
Share This
Related Resources
Add to Calendar 2024-06-26 14:00:00 2024-06-26 14:00:00 Gallagher Executive Compensation and Benefits Survey About the Webinar The webinar will share trends in executive pay increases, annual bonuses, and nonqualified benefit plans. Learn how to use the data charts as well as make this data actionable in order to improve your retention strategy. You’ll hear directly from the survey project manager on how to maximize the data points to gain a competitive edge in the market. Key findings on: Total compensation by asset size Nonqualified benefit plans Bonus targets and metrics Prerequisites Demographics Board expenses Watch On-Demand Web NAFCU digital@nafcu.org America/New_York public
Gallagher Executive Compensation and Benefits Survey
preferred partner
Gallagher
Webinar
Add to Calendar 2024-06-21 09:00:00 2024-06-21 09:00:00 The Evolving Role of the CISO in Credit Unions Listen On: Key Takeaways: [01:30] Being able to properly implement risk management decisions, especially in the cyber age we live in, is incredibly important so CISOs have a lot of challenges here. [02:27] Having a leader who can really communicate cyber risks and understand how ready that institution is to deal with cyber events is incredibly important. [05:36] We need to be talking about risk openly. We need to be documenting and really understanding what remediating risk looks like and how you do that strategically. [16:38] Governance, risk, compliance, and adherence to regulatory controls are all being looked at much more closely. You are also seeing other technology that is coming into the fold directly responsible for helping CISOs navigate those waters. [18:28] The reaction from the governing bodies is directly related to the needs of the position. They’re trying to help make sure that we are positioned in a way that gets us the most possibility of success, maturing our postures and protecting the institutions. Web NAFCU digital@nafcu.org America/New_York public
The Evolving Role of the CISO in Credit Unions
preferred partner
DefenseStorm
Podcast
AI in Action: Redefining Disaster Preparedness and Financial Security
Strategy
preferred partner
Allied Solutions
Blog Post
Get daily updates.
Subscribe to NAFCU today.