New-Home Sales Surged 17.5% in December

Buyers purchased the fewest number of new homes last year on records going back 47 years.

Sales for all of 2010 totaled 321,000, a drop of 14.4 percent from the 375,000 homes sold in 2009, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. It was the fifth consecutive year that sales have declined after hitting record highs for the five previous years when the housing market was booming.

The year ended on a stronger note. Buyers purchased new homes at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 329,000 units in December, a 17.5 percent increase from the November pace.

Still, economists say it could be years before sales rise to a healthy rate of 600,000 units a year.

Search Homes for Sale
See photos of homes for sale in your area and across the country on AOL Real Estate
Builders of new homes are struggling to compete in markets saturated foreclosures. High unemployment and uncertainty over home prices have kept many potential buyers from making purchases.

Home prices fell in November in 19 of 20 major cities measured by the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller index, and nine of those cities fell to their lowest point since the housing bust.

Economists expect prices will keep falling through the first six months of this year.

Poor sales of new homes mean fewer jobs in the construction industry, which normally powers economic recoveries.

On average, each new home built creates the equivalent of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in taxes, according to the National Associated of Home Builders.

The median price of a new home rose to $241,500 in December, up from a November median of $215,500. For all of 2010, the median sales price was $221,900, up 2.4 percent from the 2009.

For December, sales rose in all parts of the country except the Northeast, which saw a 5 percent decline. Sales surged 71.9 percent in the West and were up 3.2 percent in the Midwest and 1.8 percent in the South.

Learn about investing from the comfort of your own home.

Portfolio Basics

Take the first steps to building your portfolio.

View Course »

Investment Strategies

Learn the strategies you need to build a winning portfolio

View Course »

Add a Comment

*0 / 3000 Character Maximum

3 Comments

Filter by:
sgentilejr

Home sales and prices will continue to decline until some time AFTER the year
2020. Forty Million Baby Boomers age growing old and dying off and they no longer need their primary home or their second vacation home. As they die off the housing market will constantly be flooded with vacant homes for over a decade to come.
If we continue to buy imported products and continue to give our nation's wealth away___before long none of us will have a job.
Example: Colgate and Ultra Brite toothpaste are not made in Mexico and when you buy them you are helping to give our dollars and jobs away to Mexico___Yet you did not know they are made in Mexico because you are too freaki9ng brain dead and dumb to look at the packages when you buy anything.

January 26 2011 at 5:26 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
bohemianacres

What an infomercial and a misleading headline. If a drop from 375 thousand to 321 thousand is 14+ percent drop, how is 321 thousand to 329 thousand an increase (surge, as you put it) of 17+ percent. Talk about cooking the tally sheet. I know a few large banks, like BofA and Citi, who would like to hire you as their chief accountant. Come on, people, if this is the worst yet in 47 years, there can only be "surges" if it goes up. After all one to two is an hundred percent increase. Besides, you do not mention the new homes purchased. Were they one bedroom townhomes which the babyboomers are buying up at 8000 a day as they retire. Were they two bedroom condos like the mother-in-law of my middle son did in December. Please drop such items unless there is more info to relate to and help give perspective to the "surge".

January 26 2011 at 10:46 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply