Existing Home Sales Plunging – Analyst Blog
Source: http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/16524/Existing+Home+Sales+Plunging+-+Analyst+BlogPosted on Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008 | In Stocks to Watch
Today is a big day for housing data, and none of it looks good.
In November nationwide, existing home sales fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.49 million, down 8.6% from 4.91 million in October and down 10.6% from a year ago. All regions of the country were down on a month to month basis. The worst hit was the Northeast (-12.0%) followed by the South (-10.9%). The Midwest was down 7.4% while the West held up relatively well, down just 4.3%.
On a year-over-year basis, the West really stands out as an exception, being up 17.9%, as the other regions were all down between 16 and 18%. However, in many important parts of California, more than half of all existing house sales now involve houses that have been foreclosed on.
Housing inventory actually increased slightly with 4.203 million houses available for sale, up from 4.198 million last month, but down slightly from 4,217 million a year ago. Falling sales with steady inventory leads to higher months supply (think of it as an inventory turnover rate). The months supply rose to 11.2 months, matching the high for this cycle set back in April, from 10.3 months in October and 10.1 months a year ago. In a healthy market, months supply are usually around 5 months, and at the height of the boom fell below 4 months. Prices also fell both month to month (median down 2.8%, average down 2.3%) and year-over-year (median down 13.2%, mean down 12.3%).
Falling transactions, static inventories, and falling prices. Even though mortgages are getting cheaper, following treasury note levels down to absurdly low levels, they are only available to those with spotless credit. Even there, what happens to the banks that make these mortgages when interest rates go back up as they inevitably will? They will be stuck unless they unload them on Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), in that case we the taxpayers will be stuck with them.
Relative to rents and incomes, housing prices are still too high. That’s relative to existing rents and incomes. With unemployment rising incomes will be falling, and there is a good chance that there will also be downward pressure on rents (and increased demand for refrigerator boxes, for shelter, demand for large appliances will be way down).
This is not over yet folks, not by a long shot. More write downs to come throughout the banking system. Avoid banks like Comerica Incorporated (CMA), Zions Bancorporation (ZION) and Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB).
Read the full analyst report on FRE
Read the full analyst report on FRE
Read the full analyst report on CMA
Read the full analyst report on ZION
Read the full analyst report on FITB
“FRE” Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
“FNM” Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
“ZION” Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
“CMA” Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
“FITB” Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
Zacks Investment Research
Last 5 posts by Dirk Van Dijk
- 3Q GDP Growth Revised to 2.8% - Analyst Blog - November 24th, 2009
- Zacks Earnings Trends Highlights: Applied Materials, KLA-Tencor, Novellus, Ford and Cummins Engine - Press Releases - November 24th, 2009
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- Zacks Earnings Preview: Deere, Tyson and BJ Services. - Press Releases - November 23rd, 2009
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California, Comerica Incorporated;, Fannie Mae, Fifth Third Bancorp, Freddie Mac, Stocks to Watch, Zacks Market Commentaries, Zions Bancorporation
![]() About Dirk Van Dijk (http://www.zacks.com/)
Dirk Van Dijk is a Senior Analyst at Zacks Investment Research. He writes the Earnings Trends article on Zacks.com which provides investors with an in-depth analysis of the markets, along with the profit performance of S&P 500 companies. Each week, this report identifies which S&P 500 sectors are showing strength and which are showing weakness. In addition, this valuable report highlights the most attractive sectors based on valuation and projected earnings growth. For more information, visit www.zacks.com or for the RSS Feed of this article: http://www.zacks.com/external/rss.php?f=34 |



