It's also pretty typical for house sales to drop in the winter because people tend to not want to move during the holiday season. The biggest time for house purchases seems to be in the summer, when kids are out of school and the weather is nicer.
New home sales plunged 17.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 610,000 units last month, the lowest level since December 2022, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Tuesday.
I think a more reasonable explanation is that the housing market was nuts from a little before Covid through probably around EOY 2022, so Dec. 2022 levels is still probably a little elevated vs "normal," whatever that means. This article seems a bit more alarmist than necessary...
This (at the end) is far more interesting to me than the rest of the article:
The median new house price increased 4.7% to $437,300 in October from a year earlier. The inventory of new homes increased to 481,000, the highest level since early 2008, from 471, 000 units in September.
That's quite a bit of inventory, so this should drive mortgage rates down over the next year, especially since the reduced fed funds rate gives a bit more room for rates to fall.
Until we stop allowing corporations to buy and control nee home sales homes will never become more affordable.
We've had years of propaganda saying that Blackrock and Zillow buying every home they can afford has no effect on the market, but it's obviously having an effect. As well as their price fixing algorithms like the one made by RealPage who is being sued by the FTC/DOJ
At the time they bought way more than they had the money for and almost bought so many units they were going to have debt issues if they didn't stop for a bit
Nah, the main problem is still supply of new construction. We've been behind pretty much ever since Covid, and demand has only increased. That has much stronger explanatory power than whatever BlackRock is doing, especially since treasuries are interesting again.
There's like 17 empty homes for every homeless person
We've built thousands of new units in my city since covid and all of them are apartment complexities owned by megacorps or SFH bought instantly by private equity. The price just keeps going up.
The amount of homes we build has no effect on price if all the big players just get to buy them and increase their ability to price fix
And even if we did have a higher vacancy rate, that wouldn't have any correlation to the homeless population, since I imagine many if not most of these vacant properties are occasionally used for vacations and whatnot (could probably figure that out from the data linked above), meaning the owner wouldn't be interested in having it be set up for use by homeless people, and they're probably in areas with a lower homeless population anyway.
The problem of housing for homeless people is completely separate from housing vacancy rates. People aren't going homeless because there isn't enough housing available, they're going homeless because they can't afford the housing that's available. Making more housing available that homeless people can't afford won't solve anything, we need charities and government agencies to provide housing for free or very cheap.
We let them sit empty instead of making the logical decision to use them and help fix our housing shortage.
That's not up to "us," it's up to homeowners. We can't just snap our fingers and have all available housing available for use by homeless people, the owners wouldn't be okay with that.
The closest we can get is to increase property taxes, which would discourage people from having second (or more) properties.
But like the statistics show, that isn't the issue here. Housing vacancies are down, almost to record lows, which means there's a supply problem. We can discuss what kind of supply we need (SFH vs multi-family), but the vacancy rate isn't the problem here. We need more housing, and we need better social programs to help w/ homeless people, we don't need to hit a 0% vacancy rate though.
We value people's ability to make money off of human needs more than other people's ability to obtain human needs, it's as simple as that.
We perpetuate an immoral and unethical society so greedy people can indulge in greed. I'm sorry it doesn't sicken you like it should, we've been trained to accept this unethical system.
Whether it sickens me is irrelevant. I'm talking about the facts of the situation, which don't support the implication that we could solve homelessness by using vacant properties.
We should work toward solving homelessness, but vacant properties aren't relevant to those solutions.