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Sales of existing homes, not new construction, in May rose more than 4% from a year ago. The median selling price hit a ...
Las Vegas-based Home Builders Research reported Cadence had 120 sales in April, which puts it on track to come close to or exceed its 2024 sales numbers of 1,386.
New Home Sales Rise in April, Defying Economic Uncertainty. Sales of new single-family homes rose 10.9% to 743,000 from 670,000 in March, Commerce Department report shows. By Ed Frankl.
At the end of April, the number of new homes for sale stood at 504,000, slightly declining from 507,000 the previous month. Compared with April last year, the total for-sale inventory was up 8.6%.
Sales of new U.S. single-family homes fell by the most in nearly three years in May as high mortgage rates and rising ...
The inventory and sales combination has resulted in 8.1 months of supply, an 11% drop month over month and a 5.2% rise annually. The media sales price of new homes hit $407,200, 2% drop from last ...
Sales of new U.S. single-family homes unexpectedly increased in April as builders lowered prices to lure buyers, but rising mortgage rates and an uncertain economic outlook remain constraints for the ...
U.S. new home sales grew 10.6% to 739K in July, higher than the 624K expected and 668K in June, which was revised from 617K. Home sales prices strengthened from the previous month. The median new ...
US new home sales rose by nearly 11% in April, as opposed to the 4% decline that economists were expecting and homebuyers showing some resiliency despite elevated mortgage rates. Kristopher ...
New home sales retreated in May, experiencing their largest monthly decline in nearly 3 years. Sales were at a seasonally ...
US new home sales reach 743,000 in April, exceeding expectations New house sales rise 10.9% monthly and 3.3% yearly in April, according to US Census Bureau data Mucahithan Avcioglu | 23.05.2025 ...
--Sales of new single-family homes rose 10.9% to 743,000 from 670,000 in March. --Sales had been expected to come in at 695,000 according to economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.