New-home sales rose more than expected in May, with record-low mortgage rates pulling buyers back into a housing market that froze up during the pandemic.
Purchases of single-family houses climbed 16.6% to a 676,000 annualized pace, government data showed Tuesday. The median forecast based on a Bloomberg Survey of economists was for 640,000.
Homebuilders are welcoming buyers back after social-distancing rules across much of the U.S. kept them on the sidelines in March and April.
A growing share of buyers are opting for new homes because existing-home listings are in short supply. Record-low interest rates have made the properties affordable to a larger share of buyers.
"The fact that we're reaching the levels we are in a pandemic and a recession is unbelievable," said Ali Wolf, chief economist at Meyers Research. "Low rates have tilted the equation toward some buyers actually being able to afford a new home."