Existing Home Sales (Annualized) vs Initial Jobless Claims
Existing Home Sales (Annualized) is currently 4.26M (up +0.2M). Initial Jobless Claims is currently 219K (down -6.0K).
| Metric | Existing Home Sales (Annualized) | Initial Jobless Claims |
|---|---|---|
| Current value | 4.26M | 219K |
| Previous reading | 4.08M | 225K |
| Change | +0.2M | -6.0K |
| Trend | up | down |
| Frequency | Monthly | Weekly |
| Source | National Association of Realtors | Department of Labor |
| Last updated | 2026-03-20 | 2026-04-03 |
| Category | housing | employment |
What Existing Home Sales (Annualized) measures
Existing home sales measures the number of completed sales of previously owned homes, expressed as a seasonally adjusted annual rate. It accounts for approximately 85-90% of all home sales in the U.S.
At 4.26 million, existing home sales remain well below the 2021 peak of 6.1 million. The 'lock-in effect' — where homeowners refuse to give up sub-4% mortgages — continues to constrain inventory. For executives, this suppressed transaction volume affects real estate commissions, moving services, home improvement spending, and mortgage origination revenue across the industry.
What Initial Jobless Claims measures
Initial jobless claims count the number of people filing for unemployment insurance for the first time each week. It is the most timely indicator of labor market conditions, released every Thursday.
At 219,000, weekly claims remain historically low and signal a stable labor market. Claims below 250,000 indicate minimal layoff activity. For executives, low claims mean retention is high industry-wide — layoffs are rare and the labor market favors workers. A sudden spike above 300,000 would signal emerging economic stress.
Frequently asked
Existing Home Sales (Annualized) is currently 4.26M, up +0.2M from the previous reading. Source: National Association of Realtors, updated monthly.
Initial Jobless Claims is currently 219K, down -6.0K from the previous reading. Source: Department of Labor, updated weekly.
At 4.26 million, existing home sales remain well below the 2021 peak of 6.1 million. The 'lock-in effect' — where homeowners refuse to give up sub-4% mortgages — continues to constrain inventory. For At 219,000, weekly claims remain historically low and signal a stable labor market. Claims below 250,000 indicate minimal layoff activity. For executives, low claims mean retention is high industry-wi