US home builder sentiment falls in July amid affordability challenges

WASHINGTON, July 16 (Reuters) – U.S. homebuilder sentiment unexpectedly fell in July, weighed down by economic uncertainty and high mortgage rates amid conflict in โ€Œthe Middle East, a survey showed on Thursday. The National Association of Home โ€ŒBuilders/Wells Fargo Housing Market index dropped two points to 34 this month from an upwardly revised reading โ€‹of…


US home builder sentiment falls in July amid affordability challenges

WASHINGTON, July 16 (Reuters) – U.S. homebuilder sentiment unexpectedly fell in July, weighed down by economic uncertainty and high mortgage rates amid conflict in โ€Œthe Middle East, a survey showed on Thursday.

The National Association of Home โ€ŒBuilders/Wells Fargo Housing Market index dropped two points to 34 this month from an upwardly revised reading โ€‹of 36 in June. It was the 15th straight month that the index remained below 40, the longest such stretch since 2012. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index holding steady at a previously reported estimate of 35.

“Many potential buyers remain โ€Œon the sidelines as they โ wait for lower mortgage rates, more certainty on inflation and a clearer economic outlook,” said NAHB chairman Bill Owens.

Mortgage rates are likely โ to remain elevated amid renewed hostilities between the United States and Iran following the collapse of a fragile ceasefire last week.

The NAHB welcomed a bipartisan housing affordability legislation โ€‹recently passed โ€‹by the U.S. Congress, which includes measures โ€‹to restrict single-family homeownership by investment โ€Œfirms and waive or speed up environmental reviews for construction projects. The bill became law over the weekend despite President Donald Trump not signing, demanding that a separate voting bill be passed.

“Looking ahead, the newly enacted housing law is a positive step that will help expand housing supply and lower overall housing costs, although โ€Œmore policy change is needed at the state โ€‹and local level,” said NAHB chief economist Robert โ€‹Dietz.

The share of builders reporting cutting โ€‹prices increased to 37% from 35% in June. The average โ€Œprice reduction was unchanged at 6%. The โ€‹use of sales incentives โ€‹rose to 63% from 62% in June, marking the 16th consecutive month this share has reached 60% or higher.

The survey’s measure of current sales โ€‹conditions fell one point to โ€Œ37, while its gauge of future sales dropped two points to 43. โ€‹A measure of prospective buyer traffic slipped two points to 23.

(Reporting โ€‹by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

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