U.S. Existing Home Sales (December 2024)
Admir Kolaj, Economist | 416-944-6318
Date Published: January 24, 2025
- Category:
- U.S.
- Data Commentary
- Real Estate
U.S. existing home sales rise for third consecutive month in December
- Existing home sales rose 2.2% month-on-month (m/m) to 4.24 million units (annualized) in December, coming broadly in line with market expectations. Sales were up 9.3% from year-ago levels.
- Sales gains were broad based across segments, with single-family up 1.9% m/m, and sales in the smaller condo/co-op segment up 5.1% m/m.
- Activity improved across most Census regions, with sales rising 3.9% (m/m) in the Northeast, 3.2% in the South, and 2.6% in the West. Activity retreated 1% in the Midwest, after increasing by roughly 7% and 5% respectively in the two previous months.
- Total housing inventory at the end of December was 1.15 million units (non-seasonally adjusted), down 13.5% from November but up 16.2% from a year ago. Unsold inventory sits at a 3.3-month supply at the current sales pace, down from 3.8 months in November but up from 3.1 months in December 2023.
- House prices gained further momentum, rising to 6% from a year ago, an increase from 4.2% (y/y) the month prior. On a seasonally adjusted basis, median home prices rose 1.5% m/m, building on gains of about 0.8% in each of the three months prior (seasonal adjustment performed by TD Economics).
Key Implications
- Existing home sales managed to eke out some moderate growth to close out 2024. The extension of the positive streak that began in October is encouraging, especially given the back up in yields and mortgage rates since then. However, this is coming off a very low starting point, with sales still well over 30% below its pre-Fed tightening level.
- Mortgage rate volatility has continued over the last several weeks. After easing to around 6.6% in early December, mortgage rates have trekked higher and are currently hovering around 7%. This, combined with limited inventories and the fact that price growth has gained momentum, suggests some giveback in sales is likely in early 2025. We still expect mortgage rates to ease later this year, and activity to pick up as a result (see here). That said, trade skirmishes, which may keep the Fed on the sidelines for longer than expected, and result in rates staying higher for longer, will bear careful watching given the downside risk that this would pose for sales.
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