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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Surprise 5.9% drop in new home sales; prices hit record high

Sold signs stand in front of new homes under construction Monday, March 15, 2021, in Houston. Sales of new homes fell a bigger-than-expected 5.9% in April, a drop that analysts blamed in part on soaring home prices.  (Associated Press)
From staff and wire reports

From staff and wire reports

Sales of new homes fell unexpectedly in May, and the 5.9% retreat was the second consecutive monthly decline even as the median price hit an all-time high.

The May sales decline pushed sales to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 769,000, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. That followed a 7.8% sales decline in April, a figure that was revised lower from what was initially thought to be a drop of only 5.9%.

The median price of a new home sold in May jumped to $374,400, up 18.1% from a year ago when the median price stood at $317,100. The average home price also rose in May to $420,600, compared with $368,700 a year ago.

A shortage of homes on the market and increasing costs for materials like lumber, and also labor, is fueling the upward momentum.

Spokane County’s median closing price was $375,500 in May, a 29.5% increase compared with $289,900 in May 2020, according to the Spokane Association of Realtors.

The number of home sales in the county increased 36.9% last month, compared with May 2020.

Some 686 single-family homes and condominiums on less than one acre sold in May, compared with 501 homes in May 2020.

In Kootenai County, the median home price was $450,000 in May for homes on less than two acres, a 36.8% increase from May 2020. Some 1,312 homes sold through May 2021, a 17.5% increase compared with homes sold the first five months of 2020, according to the Coeur d’Alene Association of Realtors.

The surge in lumber prices that began this year has started to unwind and that could help slow surging housing costs, but the shortage of homes to buy is still creating a very high bar for potential buyers.

“What we need to take the edge off double-digit housing price gains is more houses and the builder backlog and the strong permits rate show more new homes are coming,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist at Navy Federal Credit Union.

The inventory of new homes for sale increased to 330,000 in May, up 4.8% from the end of April. That would represent a 5.1-month supply of new homes at last month’s sales pace.

Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said “supply constraints appear to be easing somewhat” but she predicted that rising home prices would continue to be a headwind for sales.

Sales of existing homes fell for the fourth consecutive month in May, the National Association of Realtors said this week, even as the median price soared 23.6% from a year ago and breached $350,000 for the first time.

Homes that do hit the market often get multiple offers far exceeding the listing price.

Demand is also being juiced by low mortgage rates, reflecting efforts by the Federal Reserve to help lift the economy out of the pandemic-triggered recession.

Declines were led by a 14.5% drop in the South, the region of the country that accounts for more than half of new homes sold annually.

Sales were flat in the Midwest and up in the other two regions, led by a 33.3% sales gain in the Northwest and a 6.7% gain in the West.

Spokesman-Review staff writer Amy Edelen contributed to this report.