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That level of activity was still 23.3 percent below a year ago, indicating that housing remains in a steep downturn. Analysts had been expecting sales would fall by 2.5 percent last month from an August sales pace that had originally been reported as 795,000 homes.Fewer new homes mean fewer new appliances being bought, less furniture, and a downturn in home furnishing sales. Housing is such a large part of the overall economy that it's only natural for worries to surface when things go south.
However, that figure was revised sharply lower in the new report to show a sales rate of just 735,000 in August, the slowest sales pace in 11 years.
Meanwhile, orders for big-ticket manufactured goods dropped an unexpected 1.7 percent last month following an even bigger 5.3 percent plunge in August. The first back-to-back declines in factory orders in more than a year raised new worries about how much harm would be inflicted on the economy from a severe housing slump and credit crunch.