Economic Watch: Two Out of Three Reports Show Growth
Three important economic reports rolled in the past few days, with a split decision over sales of homes, while a third one measuring where the overall economy is headed shows continued growth and possibly greater economic strength.
Evan Lockridge・Former Business Contributing Editor
August 23, 2013
2 min to read
Three important economic reports rolled in this week, with a split decision over sales of homes, while a third one measuring where the overall economy is headed shows continued growth and possibly greater economic strength.
New home sales in the United States during July fell to its lowest annual rate since October. The 13.4% decline translates into an annual rate of sales just below 400,000, according to the U.S. Commerce Department.
Ad Loading...
It’s believed the decline is coming from less demand, due to interest rates on homes hitting a two-year high, rather than tighter supplies.
The follows a separate report that sales of existing homes in the country increased 6.5% in July, according the National Association of Realtors. The performance was the best since November 2009 with the annual rate hitting 5.39 million homes. Sales were 17.2% higher than the same time a year ago.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said changes in affordability are impacting the market. “Mortgage interest rates are at the highest level in two years, pushing some buyers off the sidelines.”
Ad Loading...
Despite higher mortgage interest rates, Yun identified compensating factors that can sustain a continued recovery. “Although housing affordability conditions will become less attractive, jobs are being added to the economy, and mortgage underwriting standards should normalize over time from current stringent conditions as default rates fall.”
Finally, a measure of where the economy is headed over the next three to six months, turned in its best performance in three months during July, following no change the month before.
The Conference Board’s Index of Leading Economic increased 0.6%.
Ataman Ozyildirim, Economist at The Conference Board said, “Following moderate growth in the last few months, the U.S. LEI picked up in July, with widespread gains among its components. The pace of the LEI’s growth over the last six months has nearly doubled, pointing to a gradually strengthening expansion through the end of the year”
Ken Goldstein, Economist at The Conference Board said, “The improvement in the LEI, and pick up in the six-month growth rate, suggest better economic and job growth in the second half of 2013. However, the biggest uncertainties remain the pace of business spending and the impact of slower global growth on U.S. exports.”
When the unexpected happens, how you react to, and deal with operational blind spots is critical. Here’s how to keep you recovery on track, when nothing is normal.
As fleets adopt artificial intelligence for routing, maintenance, and load matching, new security risks are emerging. Learn where the vulnerabilities are and how to put the right controls in place.
CargoNet reports fewer supply chain crime events to start 2026. But losses hold steady as organized crime shifts tactics toward impersonation schemes and high-value goods.
Heavy Duty Trucking is searching for forward-looking leaders at trucking fleets as nominations for HDT’s Truck Fleet Innovators 2026. Deadline is May 15.
Cargo theft rings plant operatives as drivers inside legitimate, fully vetted carriers, then execute coordinated thefts that look like a traditional straight theft from the outside.