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New Listings Reach Lowest Level of Any Early June on Record

As home prices and interest rates remain elevated, limiting overall home sales nationwide, new listings of homes for sale fell 25% year-over-year to their lowest level of any early June on record, according to a new report from Redfin [1]. New findings revealed the continued lack of new listings has pushed the total number of homes on the market down 5% year-over-year.

High mortgage rates are driving the inventory shortage, with the daily average hitting 6.94% on June 7, near its highest level in two decades. The vast majority of homeowners have a mortgage rate below 6%, discouraging them from listing their home and giving up their relatively low rate.

Limited inventory is keeping national home-price declines relatively modest, with the typical U.S. home price down 1.6% year-over-year. That’s the smallest dip in three months and half the size of April’s 3.2% drop, which was the biggest in at least a decade.

While home prices are still increasing in some parts of the country, the median U.S. asking price is unchanged from a year ago after several weeks of declines, indicating that home sellers in at least some metro areas are noticing that they can command favorable prices.

Leading indicators of homebuying activity:

In addition to inflating prices, the scarcity of listings is limiting purchases. Pending home sales are now down 17%, continuing a yearlong streak of double-digit drops. But early-stage homebuying demand continues to hold up, with Redfin’s Homebuyer Demand Index near its highest level in a year. That indicates that would-be homebuyers are out there and may make an offer when mortgage rates decline and/or more homes are listed.

“Homes priced under $500,000 are flying off the market because buyers in that price range don’t have many options,” said Sacramento Redfin Premier agent David Orr. “I've been working with one first-time homebuyer for about a year, and she’s adjusted her search as rates have risen. Now that mortgage rates are close to 7%, she’s looking at lower-priced, smaller homes. But the problem we’re facing now is competition: In that lower price range, it takes many misses before you get a hit. She just made an offer nearly $30,000 above asking price for a home listed at $429,000, but she lost out because it had four other offers. I’m advising buyers to get their loan pre-approved and look at homes under budget so they’re prepared to go above asking price.”

Key housing market takeaways for 400+ U.S. metro areas:

Although home sales remain limited, many buyers are still touring homes. Touring activity as of June 4 was up 16% from the start of the year, compared with a 2% decline at the same time last year, according to ShowingTime [2]. Tours declined during this time last year as mortgage rates surged nationwide.

To read the full report, including more data, charts and methodology, click here [1].