Always encouraging to see a strengthening housing
sector. Strong housing drives all
sectors of the market.
Home builders remain kind of confident in the market for new
single-family homes, despite policy uncertainties in Washington, D.C., and
rising construction costs.
The Housing Market Index compiled by the National
Association of Home Builders remained at 54 in November. This marked the sixth
consecutive month that more home builders viewed market conditions as good
rather than poor.
That's "an encouraging sign, considering the unresolved
debt and federal budget issues cause builders and consumers to remain on the
sideline," said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe.
The survey asked builders to rate current sales, sales
expectations, and traffic of prospective buyers.
Current sales conditions stayed at 58, while expectations
for future sales fell one point to 60. Buyer traffic was the index's
worst-performing component, dropping one point to 42.
"Given the current interest rate and pricing
environment, consumers continue to show interest in purchasing new homes, but
are holding back because Congress keeps pushing critical decisions on budget,
tax and government spending issues down the road," said NAHB Chairman Rick
Judson, owner of Evergreen Development Group in Charlotte, N.C.
"Meanwhile, builders continue to face challenges related to rising
construction costs and low appraisals."
Source: Philadelphia
Business Journal
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