Monday, November 30, 2009

News You Can Use - Trends and Numbers

New US home sales rise 6.2 percent
By ALAN ZIBEL (Associated Press)
Sales of new homes rose more than expected last month to the highest level in more than a year as the housing market shows stability after its historic collapse.

The Commerce Department says sales rose 6.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 430,000 from an upwardly revised 405,000 in September. Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected a pace of 410,000. Read more.

Existing-Home Sales Jump 10.1%
By Big Builder Staff
The soon-to-expire $8,000 federal tax credit for first-time homebuyers sent sales of existing homes soaring in October, the National Association of Realtors reported Monday.

Sales of existing single family homes, townhouses, condominiums and co-ops surged 10.1% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.10 million units in October from a downwardly revised pace of 5.54 million in September, up 23.5% from the same month last year. The NAR has not seen numbers like this since February 2007, when the annual pace was 6.55 million. Read more.

Building Material Reuse Can Pay Off
By Teresa Burney
It's happened to every builder--the windows you ordered are the wrong size and unreturnable so they sit in the warehouse for years.

And most every remodeler has shaken his head while hauling a perfectly nice set of cabinets to the landfill because the homeowner wants something different and he has no place to store them. Read more.


Builders in Atlanta Struggle to Survive
By Michelle E. Shaw, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
When the housing market was white-hot, McCar Homes was one of the nation's leading builders.

In 2006, the Alpharetta-based company built and sold more than 2,200 homes and boasted revenues upward of $500 million. But now that the market temperature is in the Arctic region, McCar's chief executive isn't sure the company will make it into 2010. Read more.

Touched By Lumber: The World’s Most Famous Lumberyard OwnerA newly restored and remastered version of Gone With the Wind is out in Blu-Ray DVD format this Holiday season, reminding us all that Scarlett O’Hara exceeds even 84 Lumber’s Joe Hardy as the world’s most famous lumberyard owner. Scarlett, who built her business up from the ashes of a fire-ravaged, post-Civil War Atlanta, offers both good and bad management lessons for these hard times. She knew how to be tough--“The War Is Over: Don’t Ask for Credit,” one sign in her store reads. But hiring her unrequited love, the milquetoast Ashley Wilkes, to run the yard shows a serious fault in judgment. Oh well: at least when we watch the two clench in the lumberyard office, thanks to the new restoration we now can admire the moulding display in the background.








Photo courtesy of Warner Home Video.

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