July new home sales surged 13.9%

Yahoo Finance’s Brian Sozzi and Alexis Christoforous break down new home sales for July with Brad Dillman, Cortland Chief Economist.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: OK, new home sales in July jumped 13.9% to an annual rate of 901,000. This is over 36% higher than the new home sales data from July 2019. Joining us now to discuss is Brad Dillman, Cortland chief economist.

Brad, how do you-- how can you distill what we're seeing in the housing market right now? It's not just this data we got out today. It's just a string of data that says the housing market is in really, really good shape.

BRAD DILLMAN: Yeah, this was a huge print, well above expectations of 775,000 on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, which would have been basically have been about the same as the prior month. And yeah, to your point, we saw some great figures in both starts and permits, and then also in existing home sales as well, which are now back up to a level a little bit above their pre-COVID February level. So how we make sense of this, I see two reasons why-- actually, I'll give you a three.

One, we all know low mortgage rates have definitely been helping the housing market. Second is the old pent-up demand argument. A lot of people don't appreciate this, but if we think about where this print came in today, this would have been a pretty good looking new home sales print during the dot.com recession. So after 10 years of very subdued housing activity by every metric except for home prices, really, we're finally seeing new home sales and new supply really starting to come to the market.

But I think we're also beginning to look at little bit of a headwind on the supplies-- on the construction materials cost side. So overall right now, there is definitely this big move into single-family housing. But I also think that with what's happening on the cost side, we may see a little bit of pressure in the months ahead.

ALEXIS CHRISTOFOROUS: Talk to me more about where we're going to see that pressure from. We know that inventories are already pretty low. Are you seeing that the cost for these raw materials to build the homes is going to go up?

BRAD DILLMAN: Precisely, at several parts on this as well. So the average hourly earnings in construction have been ticking up. That is the rate that's been expanding since April. It's now at its highest level in a little over a year.

We had seen a lot of deflation in construction materials costs last year. So that's-- if we're to look at construction material cost gauges in year-over-year terms, they were contracting for a good chunk of 2019. And that's been wind in the sails for the housing market up to this point as well. But the most recent print on those gauges has showed year-over-year increases in July. So we're now kind of back into an inflationary environment as it relates to construction materials costs.