Tin tức thị trường
16.01.2025

U.S. homebuilder confidence unexpectedly improves in January

The National Association of Homebuilders (NAHB) reported on Thursday that its housing market index (HMI) increased to 47 in January 2025 from an unrevised December 2024 reading of 46. This represented the highest reading since April 2024 (51). 

Economists had expected the HMI to slip to 45.

A reading below 50 indicates more builders view conditions as poor than good.

According to the report, two of all three major HMI components demonstrated gains in early January. The component tracking current sales conditions jumped by 3 points to 51 and the component measuring traffic of prospective buyers climbed by 2 points to 33. Meanwhile, the component charting sales expectations in the next six months plunged 6 points to 60, due, in part, to the elevated interest rate environment.

Commenting on the latest report, NAHB Chairman Carl Harris noted that the U.S. builders are facing continued challenges for housing demand in the near term, with mortgage rates up from nearly 6.1 per cent in late September to above 6.9 per cent now. “Land is expensive and financing for private builders remains costly. However, there is hope that policymakers are taking the impact of regulatory hurdles seriously and will make improvements in 2025,” he added.

Meanwhile, NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz revealed that NAHB is forecasting a slight gain for single-family housing starts in 2025, as the market faces offsetting upside and downside risks from an improving regulatory outlook and ongoing elevated interest rates. “And while ongoing, but slower easing from the Federal Reserve should help financing for private builders currently squeezed out of some local markets, builders report cancellations are climbing as a direct result of mortgage rates rising back up near 7 per cent,” he said.

Xem thêm