Most Vacant New Homes Since Records Kept (1973)

Vacant Homes in U.S. Climb to Most Since 1970s With Ghost Towns

Almost 200,000 newly constructed single-family homes are sitting empty in the U.S., the most since Commerce Department statistics began in 1973.

About 370,000 new homes are for sale because people who initially contracted to buy them backed out, according to estimates in a Feb. 15 report from analysts at New York-based CreditSights Inc. An additional 216,000 homes are under construction, according to Commerce Department data.

In January 1973, the number of finished new homes for sale was 97,000, when the U.S. population was about 212 million, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In December 2007, 197,000 completed homes were on the market and in January 2008 there were 195,000. The current population is 303.5 million.

Home prices may fall at least 8 percent nationwide and by as much as 26 percent from the third quarter of 2007 before hitting bottom, according to a Feb. 13 report from New York- based Deutsche Bank AG analyst Karen Weaver, the firm’s global head of securitization research.

“The builders are looking for ways to accelerate sales and get inventory moving,”

The news certainly continues to be quite bad on the home front.

Related: Housing Inventory Glut (August 2007)Home Price Declines Exceeding 10% Seen for 20% of Housing MarketsEver Larger HousesExurbs Hardest Hit in Recent Housing Slump

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  1. […] Most Vacant New Homes Since Records Kept (1973), from March 2008 – Mortgage Foreclosure Rate Reaches Record 4.63% – Housing Rents Falling in the USA […]

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