New-home sales fall 5.3 pct in June … a warning light?
WASHINGTON — Sales of new U.S. homes tumbled 5.3 per cent in June and the median sales price also slipped, a potentially ominous sign for the U.S. housing market.
The Commerce Department said Wednesday that newly built homes sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 631,000 last month, less than May’s revised figure of 666,000. The decline follows solid growth in previous months. New-home sales have risen 6.9 per cent so far this year, but builders are starting to wrestle with rising costs for lumber. At the same time, mortgage rates are on the rise and wage growth has been meagre, squeezing many would-be buyers.
“Weak June new home sales add more evidence that the housing market is flattening, and may have peaked for this expansion,” said Robert Frick, a corporate economist for Navy Federal Credit Union.
Monthly home sales figures can be volatile, but the latest report follows a string of setbacks in the real estate market.

