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US housing slump hits new builds | US housing slump hits new builds |
(39 minutes later) | |
Sales of new houses in the US were disappointing last month after reaching record highs in April, figures from the US Commerce Department have shown. | Sales of new houses in the US were disappointing last month after reaching record highs in April, figures from the US Commerce Department have shown. |
Sales of new builds dropped 1.6% - below market forecasts - to an annual rate of 915,000. | Sales of new builds dropped 1.6% - below market forecasts - to an annual rate of 915,000. |
This comes as April numbers were also revised downward from an annual rate of 981,000 units to 930,000, as US housing market recovery proved short-lived. | This comes as April numbers were also revised downward from an annual rate of 981,000 units to 930,000, as US housing market recovery proved short-lived. |
Existing home sale figures for May, published Monday, hit four-year lows. | |
Analysts had forecast that the worst of the problems in the US housing market had passed after the April numbers were released showing monthly sales up more than 16% to 14-year highs. | |
But the downgraded figure, combined with a further drop in the price of a new home, have renewed fears that the slump in the housing market could drip into the broader economy causing recession. | |
Continued slump | |
New house prices fell 0.9% to $236,100 (£118,098) in May after an 11.1% slump in the previous month as builders continue to offer heavy incentives to buyers to shift stock. | |
This combined with figures showing a fall in consumer confidence in June, will not reassure a market already concerned with higher inflation, higher interest rates and economic growth, analysts said. | |
The Conference Board, a private business group, said that its consumer confidence index fell almost five points to 103.9, its lowest level since last August and below what market observers were expecting. | |
The US Federal Reserve's rate-setting committee begins a two-day meeting on Wednesday to decide on the direction of interest rates. | |
It is widely expected to hold rates at 5.25%. |
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