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DAVIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 24:  A home under construction sits near a for sale sign on March 24, 2010 in Davie, Florida. The Commerce Department announced that new home sales fell 2.2 percent in February.
DAVIE, FLORIDA – MARCH 24: A home under construction sits near a for sale sign on March 24, 2010 in Davie, Florida. The Commerce Department announced that new home sales fell 2.2 percent in February.
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WASHINGTON — The recovery in the housing market is at risk of collapsing.

Home sales are sliding, prices are stalling and foreclosures are rising. And mortgage rates are likely to go up after next week, when the Federal Reserve ends a program that has driven them down.

The trend could threaten the broader economy, economists warn.

People whose home equity is stagnant or shrinking are less likely to spend freely.

Only a few months ago, the housing market had been showing signs of strength as it recovered from the most painful downturn in decades. Much of the improvement, though, came from government programs that held down mortgage rates and provided tax breaks for buyers.

Since the fall, sales have sunk. And the government support is running out.

The latest sour news came Wednesday, when the Commerce Department said sales of new homes fell last month to their lowest point on record. It was the fourth straight drop.

“While bad weather could well have suppressed the February result, it was dismal no matter how one tries to slice and dice it,” wrote Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at MFR Inc.

That news followed a report a day earlier that sales of existing homes fell for the third straight month in February to their lowest level since July.

In its report on new homes, the Commerce Department said sales plummeted in parts of the country that were hit by bad weather. In the Northeast, they fell 20 percent from a month earlier. Midwestern sales fell 18 percent. Sales fell nearly 5 percent in the South but rose 21 percent in the West.

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