A government report to be released Wednesday is forecast to show that new home sales fell in May after an unexpected increase a month earlier.
The Commerce Department is expected to report that new home sales dipped 2.1 percent in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 515,000 units, according to the consensus forecast of Wall Street economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR. The report is scheduled to be released at 10 a.m. EDT.
The government last month reported that new home sales rose 3.3 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 526,000 units. Still, the government revised March activity downward to an annual rate of 509,000, the weakest sales pace since April 1991.
Builders such as Centex Corp., Pulte Homes Inc. and Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. have been caught with a glut of unsold properties over the past year as mortgages became harder to get and sales slowed. Builders have slashed prices, but many buyers remain on the sidelines, waiting and watching for bigger discounts.
Economists believe that new home sales will remain weak as the housing industry struggles with falling prices and rising foreclosures, which are dumping even more homes on an already glutted market. Economists believe that home prices will remain under pressure until the number of unsold properties is worked down to more manageable levels.