The
National Association of Homebuilders (NAHB) announced on Monday its housing
market index (HMI) stood at 83 in May, unchanged from 83 in April.
Economists
had forecast the HMI to remain at 83.
A
reading over 50 indicates more builders view conditions as good than poor.
The three HMI components
were mixed this month. The indicator gauging current sales conditions held
steady at 88, while the component measuring traffic of prospective buyers decreased
1 point to 73 and the measure charting sales expectations in the next six
months went up 1 point to 81.
NAHB
Chairman Chuck Fowke noted: “Builder confidence in the market remains strong
due to a lack of resale inventory, low mortgage interest rates, and a growing
demographic of prospective home buyers. However, first-time and
first-generation home buyers are particularly at risk for losing a purchase due
to cost hikes associated with increasingly scarce material availability.”
Meanwhile,
NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz noted: “Low-interest rates are supporting
housing affordability in a market where the cost of most materials is rising. In
recent months, aggregate residential construction material costs were up 12%
year over year, and our surveys suggest those costs are rising further. Some
builders are slowing sales to manage their own supply chains, which means
growing affordability challenges for a market in critical need of more
inventory.” With labor and lot availability a challenge in many markets, Dietz
cautioned that “home buyers should expect rising prices throughout 2021 as the
cost of materials, land and labor continue to rise.”
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