Weekly Market Insight 12.28.09

Home Sales In Millions. Source: Census Bureau, National Association of Realtors, Grubb & Ellis

Sales trends for new and existing homes parted company in November. The National Association of Realtors reported that existing home sales rose 7.4 percent from October to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.54 million units, the highest level since February 2007. Meanwhile, the Census Bureau reported that new home sales sank to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 355,000 units, down 11.3 percent from October and the weakest level in seven months. Sales of foreclosed and other distressed properties are inflating existing home sales at the expense of new home sales, having accounted for 33 percent of existing sales last month. The tax credit for first-time buyers, which was set to expire at the end of November, helped both new and existing home sales. But new home sales are counted when the sales contract is signed or a deposit is accepted while existing home sales are counted when the sale is closed, meaning that new home sales attributable to the tax credit likely showed up earlier in the data. The extension of the tax credit through April 2010 and its expansion to include some repeat buyers will provide a boost to home sales as the spring selling season gets underway. Besides ending the tax credit next year, the government will wind down its purchases of mortgage-backed securities, which has helped keep mortgage rates low. The withdrawal of these support programs will be a test to see if the housing market can continue to recover on its own or whether there could be another leg down in prices as foreclosures continue to mount.  Courtesy of Robert Bach, SVP, Chief Economist, Grubb & Ellis.

For a free consultation of your commercial real estate needs please contact Sean Thompson at 406.539.0082 or sean.thompson@grubb-ellis.com OR Joe Cobb at 406.579.299 or joe.cobb@grubb-ellis.comwww.MTcommercialRE.com

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