* Home sales up 4.3 percent to 1-1/2 year-high
* Inventory of homes falls to 7-year low
* Median home price lowest in 10 years
WASHINGTON, Feb 22 (Reuters) - U.S. home resales rose to a 1-1/2-year high in
January, pushing the supply of properties on the market to the lowest level in
almost seven years in a hopeful sign for the housing sector.
The National Association of Realtors said on Wednesday existing home sales
increased 4.3 percent to an annual rate of 4.57 million units last month, the
fastest pace since May 2010.
It was the latest indication the housing market may be coming off the floor.
While economists attributed some of the rise to unseasonably warm winter
weather, they also said it signaled genuine improvement.
Sales were up across all four regions of the country, with the West recording
the biggest gain -- an 8.8 percent increase.
"At least some of the improvement in the last few months could have reflected
milder winter weather, but for the most part, it seems that the housing sector
may have turned the corner," said Guy Berger, an economist at RBS in Stamford,
Connecticut
The tenor of the report was weakened somewhat by a sharp downward revision to
December's sales data to show only a 4.38 million unit sales rate rather than
the previously reported 4.61 million unit pace.
A brightening economic outlook, marked by a strengthening labor market and
buoyant factories, is giving the housing market some lift. Confidence among
homebuilders is near five-year highs and they are breaking more ground on new
housing projects.
Residential construction is expected to contribute to growth this year for
the first time since 2005.
Robert Toll, executive chairman of luxury homebuilder Toll Brothers, welcomed
that progress even as his company announced a surprise quarterly loss on
Wednesday.
"Since the new home industry is coming off several years of historic low
levels of production, we are encouraged by the recent improvement," he said in a
statement.
The data did little to lift U.S. stock market sentiment, with shares ending
down after weak data on European business activity. Prices for U.S. government
debt rose on concerns Greece
might not be able to avert a messy default even with a fresh bailout.
The dollar rose against a basket of currencies.
INVENTORY DWINDLING
The Federal Reserve, which has suggested a number of ways other policymakers
could step in to help the beaten-up market, is considering purchasing more
mortgage-backed securities to drive mortgages rates even lower.
But some economists are skeptical that would do much good.
"I don't think the problem in the mortgage market is high interest rates or
availability of liquidity. The problem is lack of jobs and very strict lending
standards," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State
University Channel Islands.
Distressed properties, foreclosures and short sales, which typically occur at
deep discounts, accounted for 35 percent of overall sales last month, up from 32
percent in December.
A third of pending existing home sales contracts were canceled, the NAR said.
Investors bought 23 percent of homes in January, with first-time buyers
accounting for a third of the transactions.
"We expect the spring selling season to show some improvement, but we believe
it risks disappointing relative to market expectations," said Michelle Meyer, a
senior economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York. By Lucia
Mutikani
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