Written by Steven Hansen
The pending home sales index for February 2014 was released by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) today, and our analysis suggests that March 2014 existing home sales again may not be good.
- The current trends (using 3 month rolling averages) continues to show a growing deceleration in pending home sales (as well as actual existing home sales).
- Extrapolating the unadjusted data to project March 2014 existing home sales, this would be a 8.9% contraction year-over-year existing home sales.
- Pending home sales are based on contract signings, and existing home sales are based on the execution of the contract (contract closing).
- After 28 months of year-over-year growth, pending home sales according to the unadjusted data contracted year-over-year for the fourth month in a row.
The NAR reported February 2014 pending home sales index was down 0.8% month-over-month and down 10.5% year-over-year. The market was expecting month-over-month growth of -2.1% to 3.0% (consensus -0.8%) versus the growth of -0.8% reported. Econintersect‘s evaluation shows the index growth decelerated 0.9% month-over-month and down 10.2% year-over-year.
Unadjusted 3 Month Rolling Average of Year-over-Year Growth for Pending Home Sales (blue line) and Existing Home Sales (red line)
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From Lawrence Yun , NAR chief economist:
The recent slowdown in home sales may be behind us, while home prices continue to rise. Contract signings for the past three months have been little changed, implying the market appears to be stabilizing. Moreover, buyer traffic information from our monthly Realtor® survey shows a modest turnaround, and some weather delayed transactions should close in the spring.
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) pending home sales index offers a window into predicting existing home sales. The actual home sale might appear in the month the contract was signed (cash buyers account for 35% of home sales in February according to the NAR – cash buyers can close quickly), or in the following two months.
Econintersect evaluates by offsetting the index one month to project unadjusted existing home sales. Using this index offset one month suggests unadjusted existing home sales of 350,000 in March 2014 (positive 30,000 fudge factor this month for historical error using this methodology for the month of Marchs in years past).
Using Pending Home Sales to Predict Existing Homes Sales – Unadjusted Existing Home Sales (blue line) & Predictive Forecast Using Pending Home Sales Index (red line)
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Using this methodology, 280,000 (negative 15,000 fudge factor), existing home unadjusted sales were forecast for February 2014 sales vs the actual reported number of 283,000 (which is subject to further revision).
Unadjusted Year-over-Year Change in Existing Home Sales Volumes (blue line), 3 month rolling average (red line)
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As shown on the above graphic, since mid 2011 home sales have been positively growing year-over-year. However, Since November 2013 home sales showed a contraction year-over-year for the first time since 2011.
Keeping things real – home sales volumes are only 2/3rds of previous levels.
Caveats on the Use of Pending Home Sales Index
According to the NAR:
NAR’s Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI) is released during the first week of each month. It is designed to be a leading indicator of housing activity.
The index measures housing contract activity. It is based on signed real estate contracts for existing single-family homes, condos and co-ops. A signed contract is not counted as a sale until the transaction closes. Modeling for the PHSI looks at the monthly relationship between existing-home sale contracts and transaction closings over the last four years.
…… When a seller accepts a sales contract on a property, it is recorded into a Multiple Listing Service (MLS) as a “pending home sale.” The majority of pending home sales become home sale transactions, typically one to two months later.
NAR now collects pending home sales data from MLSs and large brokers. Altogether, we receive data from over 100 MLSs & 60 large brokers, giving us a large sample size covering 50% of the EHS sample. This is equal to 20 percent of all transactions.
In other words, Pending Home Sales is an extrapolation of a sample equal to 20% of the whole. Econintersect uses Pending Home Index to forecast future existing home sales.
Econintersect reset the forecasting of existing home sales using the pending home sales index coincident with November 2011 Pending home sales analysis (see here) – as the NAR in November revised the historical existing home sales data.
The Econintersect forecasting methodology is influenced by the speed at which closings occur. When they slow down in a particular period – this method overestimates. The number of cash buyers are speeding up the process (cash buyers analysis here). A quick cash home sale process could begin and end in the same month. On the other hand, contracts for short sales can sometimes take months to close. Interpreting the pending home sales data is complicated by weighing offsetting effects in the current abnormal market.
Please note that Econintersect uses unadjusted data in its analysis.
Econintersect determines the month-over-month change by subtracting the current month’s year-over-year change from the previous month’s year-over-year change. This is the best of the bad options available to determine month-over-month trends – as the preferred methodology would be to use multi-year data (but the New Normal effects and the Great Recession distort historical data).
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