Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family
homes was 37 in October, up five points from September and the
highest reading since April, according to the National
Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market
Index (HMI).
Even as builders continue to grapple with market and
macroeconomic uncertainty, sentiment levels posted a solid gain
in October as future sales expectations surpassed the 50-point
breakeven mark for the first time since last January.
“While recent declines for mortgage rates are an encouraging
sign for affordability conditions, the market remains
challenging,” said NAHB chairman Buddy Hughes, a home builder
and developer from Lexington, North Carolina. “The housing
market has some areas with firm demand, including smaller
builders shifting to remodeling and ongoing solid conditions for
the luxury market. However, most home buyers are still on the
sidelines, waiting for mortgage rates to move lower.”
“The HMI gain in October is a positive signal for 2026 as our
forecast is for single-family housing starts to gain ground next
year,” said NAHB chief economist Robert Dietz. “The 30-year
fixed-rate mortgage fell from just above 6.5% at the start of
September to 6.3% in early October. Combined with anticipated
further easing by the Fed, builders expect a slightly improving
sales environment, albeit one in which persistent supply-side
cost factors remain a challenge.”
With the government shutdown continuing and an expectation of no
Census housing construction data for September being published
this week, Dietz noted the following: “Based on modeling of
historical data, the October increase for the HMI suggests an
approximate 3% increase for the September single-family permit
data on a seasonally adjusted annual rate basis. Our model
suggests a 2% to 4% range for the increase based on the
statistical relationship.”
In a sign of ongoing challenges for the housing market, the
latest HMI survey also revealed that 38% of builders reported
cutting prices in October. This share has alternated between 37%
and 39% since June. Meanwhile, the average price reduction rose
to 6% in October after averaging 5% for several months
previously. The last time builders reduced prices by 6% was a
year ago in October 2024. The use of sales incentives was 65% in
October, unchanged from September.
All the HMI subindices rose in October. The component measuring
current sales conditions increased four points to 38, the index
gauging future sales jumped nine points to 54 and the gauge
charting traffic of prospective buyers posted a four-point gain
to 25.
Looking at the three-month moving averages for regional HMI
scores, the Northeast rose two points to 46, the Midwest was
unchanged at 42, the South increased two points to 31 and the
West gained two points to 28.
Source: floordaily.net