New home sales revisions yesterday were exceptional. I created a new chart to show the changes.New home sales from Census Department, chart by Mish
Last month I reported New Home Sales Jump 12.3 Percent Smash ExpectationsThat didn’t happen. Barring no further revisions (unlikely), sales did jump 8.6 percent. But from August unrevised the jump was actually 6.4 percent.From the as initially reported July sales 736,000 sales are down to 679,000. That’s a 7.7 percent decline in three months.With revisions out of the way, let’s ponder the latest Census Bureau fictional report on New Residential Construction.New Residential Construction Report for October
Please note the huge margins of error on these reports, currently±12.3 percent month-over-month and ±17.9 percent year-over-year.New Home Sales Since 1963
New home sales are down 34 percent since August of 2020 and are back near levels hit in 1963. That’s pretty much a crash.New Homes For Sale By Stage of ConstructionFictional Homes For Sale
Fictional Supply of Homes for Sale
Based on fictional sales and a fictional number of homes for sale, the Census Department calculates the fictional supply of new homes at 7.8 months.Existing Home Sales Hit a New 13-Year LowExisting-home sales courtesy of the National Association of Realtors via the St. Louis FedOn November 21, I noted Existing Home Sales Sink 4.1 Percent, Down 19 of the Last 21 MonthsExisting-home sales are down 40 percent since January of 2022.Comparatively speaking, new home sales are doing great, down only 34 percent. Yet the price of existing homes keeps rising.How the Fed Destroyed the Housing Market and Created Inflation in PicturesFor discussion of this dual-track housing bubble with rising prices despite a transaction crash, please see How the Fed Destroyed the Housing Market and Created Inflation in PicturesMore By This Author:Extreme Hype Required To Get Attention: Climate, Politics, And $10 Million Bitcoin It’s Not Easy To Avoid Buying Items Made Or Sourced In China Is The Great American Dream Still Alive?