Pending sales of previously owned U.S. homes
fell more than expected in November because of the end of a rush to beat
the initial expiration of a popular tax credit, a survey showed on
Tuesday.
 |
AP
|
The National Association
of Realtors said its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts
signed in November, dropped 16 percent to 96.0, after rising for nine
straight months.
Analysts
polled by Reuters had forecast pending home sales, which lead existing
home sales by one to two months, falling 2 percent in November after
rising to 114.3 in October.
Despite the monthly drop, the pending Homes Sales
Index was 15.5 percent higher compared to November 2008, the Realtors
group said.
Home
sales have been boosted by a $8,000 tax credit for first-time home
buyers, which has been expanded and extended to mid-2010. The popular
tax credit had been scheduled to expire at the end of November.
"The fact that pending
home sales are comfortably above year-ago levels shows the market has
gained sufficient momentum on its own," said Lawrence Yun, NAR chief
economist.
Yun expects another sales surge to come in the
spring, as more buyers take advantage of the tax credit, he said.
He predicts 900,000
first-time buyers will qualify for the extended credit, on top of the
approximately 2 million who have already purchased homes; 1.5 million
repeat buyers also are expected to benefit from the credit, he said.
To receive the credit,
buyers who have a contract to purchase a home by April 30 have until the
end of June to finalize the transaction.
Regionally, the pending home sales index in the
Northeast dropped 25.7 percent to 74.4 in November, but was 14.7
percent above a year ago. In the Midwest the index fell 25.7 percent to
82.0 and was 9.2 percent higher than November 2008.
Pending home sales
activity in the South fell 15.0 percent to an index of 97.8, but was
14.7 percent higher than a year ago. Contract activity in the West
declined 2.7 percent to 124.6, but was 21.4 percent above November 2008.
Source: cnbc.com