In October the National Association of Realtors recorded an unprecedented ninth consecutive month of increases in the number of signed contracts.
Although these are not closed sales, and some deals can fall through, signed contracts are a good indicator of where the housing market is headed.
Between September and October NAR's Pending Home Sales Index rose 3.7% to 114.1 from 110 in October. But the index is 31.8% higher than a year ago, when it was 86.6. That's the biggest year-over-year gain in the history of the index.
The PHSI is also at its highest level since March 2006, and the rise confounded expert expectations. A panel of industry analysts put together by Briefing.com had forecast a 1% drop in new contracts.
NAR's chief economist, Lawrence Yun, gives much of the credit for increased sales to the homebuyer's tax credit, which first-time homebuyers could claim to reduce their taxes by up to $8,000. ...
The credit had been due to lapse on Dec. 1, so many October buyers may have acted to get in under the wire.
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Home sales contracts up in October
The number of home sales contracts surged in October, as home buyers tried to take advantage of the first time homeowner tax credit:
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Last two quarters have shown some good results from everywhere. I hope this trend would continue in the coming year too.
ReplyDeleteI dont, because I want to eventually buy a home. I want affordability to come back. Otherwise I will have to move to Cali, AZ or FL in order to purchase.
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