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Zonda, an advisor in the housing industry, released the New Home Market Update report for January 2023.

 

So far, most builders report a stronger than expected start to the year. There are pockets of outperformance where some communities are exceeding sales seen at the beginning of last year, but the majority remain well below the levels seen in 2021 and early-2022.

 

This uptick in demand is captured in Zonda’s New Home Pending Sales Index (PSI) for January. The PSI was down 5.8% month-over-month when seasonally adjusted but up 4.3% when non-seasonally adjusted. Put simply, this is telling us is that sales rose nationally in January but not to the same extent as would be expected given the time of year.

 

“It has felt like we’ve experienced data whiplash over the past few months as new economic and housing stats have been released,” said Ali Wolf, Zonda’s chief economist. “It’s hard to see the uncertainty clearing anytime soon, so we recommend going back to the basics of understanding market resilience, local supply and demand dynamics, and consumer preferences to guide future developments.”

 

Sales activity ticked up but less than the traditional seasonal improvement.

Zonda’s new home sales metric counts the number of new home contract sales each month and accounts for both cancellations and seasonality. This metric shows there were 498,214 new homes sold in January on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate. This was a decline of 6.1% from last month and a drop of 37.5% from a year ago. On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, 40,112 homes were sold, 39.5% lower than last year but up 2.1% from December 2022.

 

Total volume is down due to both supply and demand. Zonda’s New Home Pending Sales Index (PSI) was created to help account for fluctuations in supply by combining both total sales volume with the average sales rate per month per community. The January PSI came in at 90.6, representing a 43.0% decline from the same month last year. The index is currently 48.0% below cycle highs. On a month-over-month basis, seasonally adjusted new home sales decreased 5.8%. Similar to total volume, the PSI ticked up on an unadjusted basis, climbing 4.3% from December 2022.

 

The PSI failed to grow in any of the select markets year-over-year, but Baltimore was again the strongest performer. The metros that performed the worst year-over-year were Phoenix (-64.4%), Las Vegas (-62.9%), and Denver (-62.8%).

 

On a monthly basis, Cincinnati, San Antonio, and Austin were the best performing metros. Cincinnati increased 0.7% relative to last month, while San Antonio and Austin were down 0.3% and 1.5%, respectively. Note, these percentages are seasonally adjust.

 

National home prices increased year-over-year across entry-level, move-up, and high-end homes. Prices rose 8.4% for entry-level to $336,943, 8.0% for move-up to $526,718, and 7.3% for high-end homes to $904,410.

 

Supplementing the data with a monthly survey Zonda conducts, the majority of builders reported holding their prices flat month-over-month from December to January. Roughly 32% of builders lowered prices and 12% increased them. 

 

57.6% of active projects are offering to-be-built incentives, up from last month. The average incentive dollar amount is $13,697 or 4.0% of the list price.

 

There are currently 13,412 actively selling communities tracked by Zonda, down 6.4% from last year. On a month-over-month basis, the national figure slipped 1.9%. Total community count is 29.8% below the same month in 2019. Zonda defines a community as anywhere where five or more units are for sale.

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Riverside/San Bernardino (+17.9%), Phoenix (+10.4%), and Los Angeles/OC (+9.3%) grew community count the most year-over-year.

Relative to last year, the biggest community count declines were in seen Baltimore (-21.1%), New York (-20.3%), and Atlanta (-19.4%).

Community count in none of our select markets rose month-over-month, 4% were flat, and 96% fell.

 

National quick move-ins (QMIs) totaled 29,084, up 203.9% compared to last year but 11.7% lower month-over-month. Total QMIs are 39.3% above 2019 levels. QMIs are homes that can likely be occupied within 90 days.

 

Zonda’s survey of builders in January found that nearly 60% of builders were either somewhat comfortable or comfortable with their QMI levels, while 37% were somewhat uncomfortable or uncomfortable. The balance said they didn’t have any QMIs.

 

The markets posting the biggest gains year-over-year were Phoenix, Tampa, and Riverside/San Bernardino. All three markets have seen QMIs rise 400%+ YOY. Month-over-month QMIs were 1% lower in Phoenix and down 24% in Tampa and Riverside/San Bernardino.

Jacksonville, Phoenix, and Sacramento have seen the most growth in QMIs compared to the same time in 2019, up 353.6%, 211.7%, and 143.4%, respectively.




 

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