Sentences with phrase «share of respondents»

Additionally, the share of respondents who say the economy is on the wrong track increased 3 percentage points to 57 percent in February, following a four - month decline.
• At 30 percent, the share of respondents who say their household expenses are significantly higher than they were 12 months ago fell 6 percentage points from last month.
The share of respondents who believe interest rates will go up over the next year increased another 5 percentage points to 62 percent, the highest level in the survey's three - year history.
The share of respondents who say home prices will go up in the next 12 months increased to 49 percent.
• At 40 percent, the share of respondents who say the economy is on the right track increased 2 percentage points from June.
The share of respondents who say mortgage rates will go up in the next 12 months decreased slightly to 57 percent.
The share of respondents who say mortgage rates will go up in the next 12 months increased by 1 percentage point, to 56 percent.
Over this same period, the share of respondents planning to purchase a «lived - in» home increased slightly to 3.2 %.
The share of respondents planning to purchase a new home was 0.9 %.
One promising trend that could alleviate supply shortages is the notable bump in the share of respondents this quarter who believe now is a good time to sell a home.
• At 38 percent, the share of respondents who say the economy is on the right track has held steady over the past three months.
The share of respondents who said they would buy if they were going to move increased by 2 percentage points to 67 percent.
The share of respondents who say mortgage rates will go up fell 3 percentage points to 43 percent, while those who say they will go down increased slightly to 7 percent.
The share of respondents who say their household income is significantly higher than it was 12 months ago remained steady at 20 percent, while those who say it is significantly lower increased slightly to 16 percent.
By contrast, the share of respondents who say now is a good time to sell climbed 4 percentage points in April but still reached only 30 percent, compared to 15 percent at the same time last year.
In a previous blog, several scatterplots showed the positive and linear relationship between the six - month moving average of the share of respondents planning to buy a new home and new single family home sales one - month ahead excluding the housing boom years, and the non-linear relationship during the period of the housing boom.
However, between 2002 and 2006, the period of the housing boom, higher new single family home sales were not matched by increases in the share of respondents planning to buy a new home proportionately.
The blue line shows the share of respondents planning to buy a new home within six months over the same time.
Figure 2 shows both new single family home sales and the share of respondents planning to buy a new home.
The analysis concluded that the share of respondents planning to buy a new home may be a valuable predictor of new single family home sales, especially the period from 2007 to the present.
The Conference Board also reported the share of respondents planning to buy a new home within six months.
As shown in Figure 2, new single family home sales have moved closely with the share of respondents planning to buy a new home within six months before 2002 and after 2006.
At 39 percent, the share of respondents who say the economy is on the right track increased slightly over December.
The share of respondents who said they would buy if they were going to move held steady at 65 percent.
The share of respondents who believe now is a good time to sell a home reached a record high of 40 % in May, compared to 30 % in April and 16 % from the previous year.
The share of respondents who say mortgage rates will go up increased 3 percentage points to 46 %, while those who believe rates will go down hit a survey low of 5 %.
The net share of respondents who say they are not concerned with losing their job rose 4 percentage points to 75 %.
The share of respondents who say their household income is significantly lower than it was 12 months ago rose to 15 percent, the first change in this statistic since April.
The share of respondents who say the economy is on the right track continued on a downward trend — decreasing 2 percentage points from last month to 33 percent.
The share of respondents who say home prices will go up in the next 12 months rose to 46 percent.
Over this same period, the share of respondents planning to purchase a «lived - in» home increased slightly to 3.2 percent.
The share of respondents who said they would buy if they were going to move increased slightly to 66 percent.
The share of respondents who say now is a good time to sell a home reached a record high of 40 percent, compared to 30 percent in April and 16 percent one year ago.
The share of respondents with expectations of lower interest rates has a small negative correlation with the share planning to buy a home, suggesting a slight dampening effect as potential buyers wait for lower borrowing costs.
The net share of respondents who say their household income is significantly higher than it was 12 months ago fell 5 percentage points to 6 percent.
-- The share of respondents who say their household expenses are significantly higher than they were 12 months ago decreased 5 percentage points to 34 percent.
• At 33 percent, the share of respondents who say their household expenses are significantly higher than they were 12 months ago fell slightly from last month.
The Conference Board also reported an increase in the share of respondents planning to buy a home within six months, from 4.4 percent in August to 6.3 percent in September, confirming the August decline in home buying plans was only one dip in a volatile data series, not an early warning signal.
-- The share of respondents who say home prices will go up in the next 12 months fell to 48 percent, and the share who say home prices will go down increased to 7 percent.
The share of respondents who believe the economy is headed in the wrong direction remained at 57 percent last month, and those who says their household income is significantly higher than it was at the same time last year decreased four percentage points to 21 percent.
The share of respondents who say home prices will go up in the next 12 months rose to 49 percent, while the share who say home prices will go down rose to 8 percent.
The share of respondents who say home prices will go up in the next 12 months decreased slightly to 48 percent, while the share who say home prices will go down decreased to 5 percent, an all - time survey low.
The share of respondents who say their household income is significantly higher than it was 12 months ago rose 4 percentage points to 29 percent — an all - time survey high.
The share of respondents who say mortgage rates will go up in the next 12 months increased 3 percentage points from last month to a survey high of 63 percent.
The Conference Board report also indicated a sharp decline in the share of respondents planning to buy a home within six months, from 5.9 percent in July to 4.1 percent in August, as well as that 60 percent of respondents expect interest rates to be higher twelve months from now.
The share of respondents who say their household expenses are significantly higher than they were 12 months decreased to 34 percent.
-- The share of respondents who say the economy is on the right track increased 3 percentage points from last month to 38 percent.
The share of respondents who say the economy is on the right track decreased by 2 percentage points to 37 percent, while those who say the economy is on the wrong track rose by 3 percentage points to 54 percent.
The share of respondents who think it would be easy to get a home mortgage today fell to 50 percent, while the share saying it would be difficult to get a mortgage rose 3 percentage points to 47 percent.
The share of respondents planning to purchase a new home was 0.9 percent.
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