WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of signed contracts to buy homes rose in March to the highest level in three years.
The
National Association of Realtors says its seasonally adjusted index for
pending home sales rose 1.5% to 105.7. That's the highest since April
2010, when a homebuyer's tax credit boosted sales. It's also above
February's reading of 104.1.
Signed contracts are 7% higher than a
year earlier. There is generally a one- to two-month lag between a
signed contract and a completed sale.
Still, sales are being held
back by limited supply. Sales of previously occupied homes dipped in
March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.92 million, from 4.95
million in February.
Total existing-home sales are projected to
increase 6.5% to 7% over 2012 to nearly 5 million sales this year, the
Realtors said, while the median existing-home price is forecast to rise
about 7.5%.
An index of 100 equals the average level of contract
activity during 2001, when home sales were in the range of 5 million to
5.5 million.
The NAR says the index for the Northeast was
unchanged at 82.8 in March, still 6.3% higher than March 2012. In the
Midwest the index increased 0.3% to 103.8, 13.7% above a year ago.
Pending home sales in the South rose 2.7% to 120.0, up 10.4% from March
2012. In the West the index increased 1.5% to 102.9, but that is 4.3%
below a year ago.
Contributing: Associated Press
Article courtesy of USA Today
It is very sad in 2013, home sales came down.
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