Morning Report: New Home Sales rise

Vital Statistics:

Stocks are lower this morning after some disappointing earnings last night. Bonds and MBS are down.

New Home sales rose 12% MOM and 34% YOY to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 759,000. The median sales price fell 12% YOY to $418,800, while the average sales price fell 5% to $503,900.

Mortgage applications fell 1% last week as purchases fell 2% and refis rose 2%. “Ten-year Treasury yields climbed higher last week, as global investors remained concerned about the prospect for higher-for-longer rates and burgeoning fiscal deficits. Mortgage rates followed Treasuries higher, with the 30-year fixed mortgage rate jumping 20 basis points to 7.9 percent – the highest since 2000. Rates have now risen seven consecutive weeks at a cumulative amount of 69 basis points,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “Mortgage activity continued to stall, with applications dipping to the slowest weekly pace since 1995. These higher mortgage rates are keeping prospective homebuyers out of the market and continue to suppress refinance activity. The ARM share of applications inched up to 9.5 percent, its highest since November 2022.”

Homebuilder Pulte Homes reported third quarter earnings. Earnings per share rose 7.8% while revenues rose 3%. Gross margins came in at 29.5%. Despite rising rates, new orders rose 43%. On the subject of mortgages and incentives, Pulte CEO Ryan Marshall said:

We continue to use the permanent 30-year buy-down as probably our most powerful incentive. Right now, we’ve got national incentives that offer 5.75% on a 30-year fixed, so I think given rates today on the open market would be over 8%, to be able to get a new home in a great location of the quality and design features that we have at 5.75%, I think is pretty powerful.

I’ll remind everybody, what we’ve done is we’ve simply redistributed incentives that we’ve historically offered toward cabinets and countertops and things of that nature, we’ve redirected those to interest rate incentives, and I think that’s the–you know, that’s been the most powerful thing for that buyer group.

Pulte says that they have about $35,000 in incentives baked into the price, so if they are losing 5-6 points on the mortgage, that is well within the $35,000 limit.

MCM announced its new Artificial Intelligence Fallout Analytics Service: “CloseLytics Pro” MCM’s founder states: “The guessing game of what’s my mortgage pipeline exposure is over….” MCM’s AI based neural network software system “CloseLytics Pro” utilizes the latest data science techniques and AI to accurately predict which loans will close with or without renegotiations in all market conditions. The system is designed to be self-correcting with automatic back testing and reporting. MCM has over 29 years of experience with managing mortgage pipeline risk using state of the art OAS technology and proven statistically based fallout analytics and has been developing and using AI tools for over 10 years. CloseLytics Pro can be integrated with any Pipeline Risk Management System or hedge advisory service. The system not only can provide singular closing rate predictions on an individual loan basis it also provides forecasts by loan for any range of market movement. For more information , contact Dean Brown @ 858 483 4404 x101

Goldman released its 2024 housing outlook yesterday, which says that 2024 will look a lot like 2023, with mortgage rates stuck between 7% and 8%. They see home price appreciation more or less stagnating – rising only 1.3% for the year. They see housing starts falling next year, weighed down by a huge backlog of multi-family properties under construction with poor absorption rates. “While the sharpest declines in housing activity and prices are now long behind us, the recent jump in mortgage rates and the prospect that they are likely to remain elevated for the foreseeable future present headwinds to the economy’s most interest rate sensitive sector.” Existing home sales are expected to fall to the lowest level since the early 90s, at 3.8 million units.

8 Responses

  1. A bust of perfectly formed breasts is really the only righteous memorial to slavery

    https://x.com/washingtonpost/status/1717632621109231903?s=46&t=vSGsUlnc4rLxcUf7zfUiHg

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  2. Rep Golden, a Marine Corps veteran who lives in Lewiston, Maine, said Thursday that in light of the recent mass shooting in his hometown he was changing his view on banning assault-style weapons.

    “Humility is called for as accountability is sought by victims of a tragedy such as this one,” Golden said at a news conference alongside other officials.

    Arguably the most conservative Democrat in the House, Golden said that “I have opposed efforts to ban deadly weapons of war like the assault rifle used to carry out this crime.”

    “The time has come for me to take responsibility for this failure,” he said. “Which is why I now call on the United States Congress to ban assault rifles like the one used by the sick perpetrator of this mass killing.”

    Golden, first elected in 2018, previously voted against an attempt to revive a federal assault weapons ban in 2022. That bill passed anyway, 217-213, but did not become law.

    “I don’t support any version of that,” Golden said last year, according to the Associated Press.

    The previous federal assault weapons ban, enacted in the ’90s with some exceptions, ended after 10 years.

    Democrats and Republicans have largely been divided about gun violence, with Democrats urging restrictions on firearms to curb frequent shootings in America while GOP lawmakers often argue such regulations are unconstitutional and ineffective compared with focusing on mental health or on increasing security.

    At Thursday’s press conference alongside Golden, Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate Republican, said that she supported some measures like a ban on high-volume ammunition magazines but did not back an assault rifle ban.

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    • The democrats are authoritarian and utopian. Couldn’t care less what they want.

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    • lms:

      Are these your words or did you just copy and paste from somewhere else? If the latter, you should provide the link or at least reference who actually wrote it.

      Apart from that, is there a reason we should care about what a D from Maine is saying about this?

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      • Hah, it was obviously a link and since I’m having trouble posting here at all…………..I’ll just apologize in advance. When I put quotes around sentences…………it means I didn’t say it myself…………..
        And thanks so much to Brent for shutting down any kind of conversation here! You guys are a trip!

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        • lms:

          Hah, it was obviously a link

          I thought so too. You should include it.

          And thanks so much to Brent for shutting down any kind of conversation here!

          Don’t pretend that you are interested in a conversation.

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        • Always loved you lmsinca, but I have to say I don’t feel you’re being objective about the folks here. We have opinions, sure, and are open to vigorous debate but I don’t think anybody is trying to shut down conversation.

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    • I hear that. Would be nice if a politician actually wanted to do something productive on the issue rather than use it as a platform to elevate their own status but I guess that’s too much to ask for.

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