NBN Online for the week of February 27, 2006

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Something for Everyone in Home Design Trends
Secretary Snow Hears Energy, Housing Affordability Issues
Property Owner Protections Upheld by Oregon Supreme Court
Coast to Coast
Cancelled Home Orders: Latest Bubble Prick?
Housing Forum
Letter to the Editor: Eagles in Ohio
Politics & Government
Rudman Report Renews Discussion of GSE Reform
Economics & Finance
New Home Sales Dip 5% in January
Housing Affordability Slumps to Record Low
Benefits Outweigh Costs of New South Carolina Housing
Eye on the Economy
Tips
Builder's Tip: Self-Centering Router Base
Business Management
Tie Employee Compensation to Achievement, Experts Say
Bankruptcy Laws Provide Relief to Manufacturers, Suppliers
50Plus Housing
Education, Designation Credits Available at 50+ Symposium
Remodelers
Remodelers Expect Slower Market Growth This Year
It’s Easier to Apply for the Remodelor™ of the Month Award
Building Systems
Log Home Combines Hot Design With Rustic Feel
Women
Is Your Digital Home Future Proof?
Commercial
Is the Grass Greener on the Commercial Side of the Fence?
Education
What CGR, CAPS Designations Mean to My Business
Education Calendar
Environment
Testing Continues on Lead-Safe Work Practices
More Effective Approach to Species Protection Advocated
Green Building
Conference in Albuquerque Takes Tour of Green Homes
Regulation
Funds Help Support Builder Battles on Significant Issues
Legal
State Laws Proposed to Limit ‘One-Stop’ Home Buying
Katrina
Steel Framers Focus on Training in Katrina Recovery
Labor
Texas A&M Students Give Home an ‘Extreme Makeover’
Building Products
Art Nouveau Lighting Celebrates 100th Anniversary
Builder's Engineer
Do You Smell Like Rover's Fire Hydrant?
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
Lexington Homes Honored for 10 ‘Extreme Team’ Projects
Association News
Jones a Candidate for NAHB Vice President and Secretary
West Virginia Builders Help Restore Housing in Biloxi
Free '2006 New Homes Month' Resources Available Online
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
Calendar of Events

Related Articles

Housing Affordability Slumps to Record Low

Benefits Outweigh Costs of New South Carolina Housing

Eye on the Economy

New Home Sales Dip 5% in January

Sales of new single-family homes fell 5% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.233 million units in January following upward revisions to the November and December rates, the U.S. Commerce Department reported on Feb. 27. The January sales rate was 3.3% above a year earlier.

“After a record-setting sales pace in 2005, home builders are seeing an orderly cooling-down process as the supply-demand balance shifts and buyers gain more leverage,” said NAHB President David Pressly. “While many builders are now offering more sales incentives to adjust to this changing environment, housing demand continues to remain quite healthy by historical standards.”

The inventory of new homes for sale rose slightly in January to a record 528,000 units from 515,000 units. There was a 5.2-month supply at the current sales pace, the highest since late 1996.

“With sales volume off, the inventory level has edged higher, but this rise is nothing to be alarmed about because the fastest growing component of the inventory run-up relates to homes that have been permitted but not yet been started, which jumped 60% from this time last year,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders.

While the weather across the nation was very mild in January, Seiders noted that this was essentially not a factor in the new home sales report. “There is little statistical relationship between home sales and weather, unlike the strong relationship between weather and housing starts. Therefore, any inference that sales numbers were actually weaker than they appeared because the weather was so good just does not hold water,” he added.

January sales were down 14.9% in the Northeast, 10.8% in the Midwest and 10.3% in the South. They were up 11.3% in the West.

“NAHB’s forecast continues to anticipate a decline of roughly 7% in new-home sales for 2006 as a whole, essentially returning to the healthy 2004 level,” said Seiders.


 

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