The number of homes for sale fell to a seasonally adjusted 394,000, the fewest since June 2004
Sales of new houses in the US unexpectedly rose in September from a 17-year low, propelled by a drop in prices ahead of the latest turmoil in financial markets.
Purchases increased 2.7 per cent to an annual rate of 464,000 from 452,000 the prior month that was less than previously estimated, the Commerce Department said on Monday in Washington. The median sales price decreased to a four-year low.
The drumbeat of builder bankruptcies since the middle of last year and frozen credit markets signal a collapse in mortgage lending that may extend the housing recession into a fourth year. Federal Reserve policy makers, meeting this week, are projected to cut interest rates again in a bid to alleviate the damage from the collapse in financial markets.
“Builders are seeing the light,” Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “They are cutting prices more aggressively. They're very nervous about all the foreclosures.”
Economists had forecast new home sales would drop to a 450,000 annual pace from an originally reported 460,000 rate the prior month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 59 economists.


