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Declining Home Sales Could Bring “Balance to the Market”

The housing market turned a corner in April as the inventory crisis showed signs of subsiding, according to a new report from Redfin [1]. The 9% year-over-year decline in homes for sale was the smallest recorded since March 2020 and the first single-digit drop since the start of the pandemic.

While inventory remained at a record low, it fell at a relatively slow pace due to soaring mortgage rates which tempered homebuyer demand. Home sales slid 8% —the biggest drop since June 2020— which allowed white-hot home-price growth to cool slightly. The median home-sale price rose 16% to $424,000, a slight slowdown from March’s 17% gain.

“When market conditions are changing it becomes more difficult for homebuyers and sellers to see eye-to-eye on pricing,” said Redfin Deputy Chief Economist Taylor Marr. “Many sellers are still seeking sky-high prices for their homes even though rising mortgage rates have limited homebuyer budgets. As a result, buyers are backing off, which is causing home sales to fall and the housing shortage to ease. As demand continues to soften, more sellers will likely be forced to drop their prices in order to get offers. The good news is that this should finally bring more balance to the market.”

Median sale prices increased from a year earlier in all of the 88 largest metro areas Redfin tracks.

The largest price increases were in:

Home sales fell from the prior year in 87 of the 88 largest metro areas Redfin tracks.

The biggest declines were in:

Some 78 of the 88 largest metros tracked by Redfin posted year-over-year decreases in the number of seasonally adjusted active listings of homes for sale.

The biggest declines were in:

The metro areas with the largest increases were in:

New listings also fell from a year ago in 78 of the 88 largest metro areas.

The largest declines were in:

New listings rose the most in McAllen, Texas, Oklahoma City, and Detroit. Home sales that closed in April spent less time on the market and sold for further above list price than a year ago.

The typical home that sold in April went under contract in 18 days —six days faster than a year earlier— and the shortest time on market ever for April. Approximately 59% of homes sold above list price, up 10 percentage points from a year earlier, and the highest level on record in Redfin’s data.

The average sale-to-list price ratio rose to a record 103.2% in April, up from 101.5% a year earlier, with the average home sold for 3.2% above its asking price.

Competition

Sales

Inventory

Redfin Estimate

To view the full report, including charts and methodology, click here [1].