Pending home sales tick lower in July as canceled contracts spike

Pending home sales tick lower in July as canceled contracts spike


July pending home sales -0.4% monthly vs. +0.3% estimated

Signed contracts to buy existing homes, known as pending sales, were weaker in July compared with June, and were canceled at the highest rate since at least 2017.

The monthly pending home sales index from the National Association of Realtors dropped 0.4% in July from June, but was still 0.7% higher from July of last year.

Mortgage rates in July were moving slightly higher, which could account for some of the drop. The average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage started July at 6.67% and then moved to 6.85% by the middle of the month and ended July at 6.75%, according to Mortgage News Daily. The rate fell more sharply in August and is now sitting at 6.51%.

“Even with modest improvements in mortgage rates, housing affordability, and inventory, buyers still remain hesitant,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the NAR. “Buying a home is often the most expensive purchase people will make in their lives. This means that going under contract is not a decision homebuyers make quickly.” 

Not only are sales moving lower, but buyers are canceling these contracts at a swift pace. Redfin, a real estate brokerage, found 15% of contracts were canceled in July, the highest rate since it began tracking the metric in 2017. This is based on a Redfin analysis of pending-sales data from MLS, a national database of listings.

Get Property Play directly to your inbox

CNBC’s Property Play with Diana Olick covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, delivered weekly to your inbox.

Subscribe here to get access today.

The report found cancellations most prevalent in Texas and Florida, citing specifically high rates in San Antonio (22.7%), Fort Lauderdale (21.3%) and Tampa (19.5%).

Redfin agents cited “cold feet” as the primary reason buyers are backing out, according to the report. That tracks with the overall uncertainty consumers are feeling about the current state of the economy.

An NAR survey of Realtors found just 16% said they expect an increase in buyer traffic over the next 3 months.

Regionally July sales dropped month-to-month in the Northeast and Midwest, were flat in the South and rose in the West.

“It’s been a ‘Cruel Summer’ overall: buyers remain squeezed by affordability challenges while sellers have been slow to adjust expectations, leaving the housing market stuck in neutral,” said Realtor.com senior economist Jake Krimmel. “Mortgage rates, too, offered little relief in July.”



Source

Big Food gets leaner with divestitures and breakups as consumers turn away from packaged snacks
Business

Big Food gets leaner with divestitures and breakups as consumers turn away from packaged snacks

Kraft Heinz announced plans to split into two separately traded companies, reversing its 2015 megamerger, which was orchestrated by billionaire investor Warren Buffett. Justin Sullivan | Getty Images News | Getty Images Big Food is slimming down. As both consumers and regulators push back against ultra-processed foods, the companies that make them have been splitting […]

Read More
Eli Lilly CEO says Medicare coverage of obesity drugs could ‘change the game’ for upcoming pill launch
Business

Eli Lilly CEO says Medicare coverage of obesity drugs could ‘change the game’ for upcoming pill launch

Eli Lilly CEO Dave Ricks on Friday said upcoming Medicare coverage of obesity drugs could be a major catalyst for the rollout of the company’s closely watched experimental weight loss pill, orforglipron. In an exclusive interview with CNBC, Ricks said Lilly expects to have Medicare coverage for the treatment “immediately following that launch, and that […]

Read More
GameStop’s Ryan Cohen eyes ‘very big’ consumer megadeal that could increase company’s value tenfold
Business

GameStop’s Ryan Cohen eyes ‘very big’ consumer megadeal that could increase company’s value tenfold

GameStop wants to acquire a publicly traded consumer company that’s far larger than the video game retailer in a deal that could be “transformational” for the company, CEO Ryan Cohen told CNBC in an interview Friday. “It’s gonna be really big. Really big. Very, very, very big,” Cohen said of the size of the acquisition. […]

Read More