The National
Association of Homebuilders (NAHB) announced on Wednesday its housing market
index (HMI) fell 3 points to 83 in January from 86 in December. This was the
lowest reading since September.
Economists had
forecast the HMI to stay at 86.
A reading over
50 indicates more builders view conditions as good than poor.
All three HMI
components recorded declines this month. The indicator gauging current sales
conditions fell 2 points to 92 in January, while the measure charting sales
expectations also dropped 2 points to 83 and the component measuring traffic of
prospective buyers declined 5 points to 68.
NAHB Chairman
Chuck Fowke noted: “Despite robust housing demand and low mortgage rates,
buyers are facing a dearth of new homes on the market, which is exacerbating affordability
problems. Builders are grappling with supply-side constraints related to lumber
and other material costs, a lack of affordable lots and labor shortages that
delay delivery times and put upward pressure on home prices. They are also
concerned about a changing regulatory environment.”
Meanwhile, NAHB
Chief Economist Robert Dietz said: “While housing continues to help lead the
economy forward, limited inventory is constraining more robust growth. A
shortage of buildable lots is making it difficult to meet strong demand and
rising material prices are far outpacing increases in home prices, which in
turn is harming housing affordability.”