The summer housing market is heating up.
According to data from the National Association of REALTORS®, the Pending Home Sales Index smashed analyst expectations, jumping 8 percent on a monthly basis in May.
Wall Street calls were for an increase of just 0.5 percent.
It was a surprise result that, coupled with the recent stronger-than-expected New Home Sales and Existing Home Sales readings, has sparked housing market optimism in Georgia and nationwide.
The biggest reason for the optimism is because of what the Pending Home Sales Index measures.
In contrast to "traditional" housing data which reports on how housing performed two months ago, for example, the Pending Home Sales Index is a forward-looking indicator; a predictor of future market activity based on freshly-written contracts between buyers and sellers.
In other words, the Pending Home Sales Index looks ahead -- not back. This is reflected in its methodology which states that 80% of homes under contract close within 2 months, and a large percentage of the rest close within Months 3 and 4.
Because May's Pending Home Sales Index rose sharply, therefore, we can expect similar jumps in the Existing Home Sales figures of June and July.
For housing and home prices, this is a positive but the gains won't apply to each home equally. The Pending Home Sales Index is still a national report for a market built on local sales. What's happening on your particular street in your particular neighborhood may not reflect what's happening somewhere else.
For accurate, real-time data in your local market, ask a real estate agent for statistics.


Mortgage markets improved again last week on a revised economic outlook for the U.S. economy, and ongoing concerns about Greece and its sovereign debt.
On paper, the market for newly-built, single-family homes looks healthy.
Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee voted to leave the Fed Funds Rate unchanged within its current target range of 0.000-0.250 percent.
Home resales
Mortgage markets improved last week as Wall Street managed news on both sides of the economic coin. There were several instances of
The housing market received a jolt of good news Thursday. The Commerce Department reports that Single-Family Housing Starts improved in May.
The jobs market is recovering slower than expected, and so is housing. But neither condition has slowed U.S. consumers.
Mortgage markets moved in feverish fashion last week, changing with extreme frequency, and eventually ending slightly worse on the week. Conforming mortgage rates fell to a 6-month low Wednesday but, by Friday, they had retreated higher.
It's a fact: It's more expensive to live in some cities than others. Beyond just the costs of buying a home, different cities also carry a different Cost of Living. For households relocating from Georgia and across state lines, the change in "life costs" can be jarring.
If you live in a high-cost area, keep an eye on your calendar. Effective October 1, 2011, temporary conforming loan limits will be lowered nationwide. Perhaps by as much as 14 percent.
Mortgage markets improved last week, carried by the same stories that have led markets better since April. Worries of a Eurozone sovereign debt default mounted, and the U.S. economy's revival showed itself to be slower than originally anticipated.

Another quarter, another sign that mortgage lending may be easing nationwide.