Home sales increased 2.5 percent and the median sale price increased 4.8 percent in April, the third month price growth trended below the 12-month average of 5.6 percent.
Overall home inventory continued to decline for the seventh month with a 3.2 percent year-over-year drop. What stood out in April was a 1.1 percent year-over-year decline in new listings for the first time since August 2014. The retreat in listings growth was widespread, with nearly two-thirds of Redfin markets seeing fewer new listings than the same time last year. The largest declines were concentrated in the Northeast, with Boston, New York and Philadelphia seeing year-over-year declines of more than 10 percent.
“Nearly all of Eastern Massachusetts is seeing bidding wars, and hot homes are scooped up two to three days after an open house. I can’t remember the last time we saw this across the board,” said Redfin agent Peter Phinney in Boston. “Competition is good for sellers in one way, but the other side of the coin is that sellers are afraid they can’t find something to move to. Moving up in the same geography is not the simple task it once was when you have to combat 10 other buyers for a desirable home. I think this situation is in large part what has caused the inventory shortage.”
In Philadelphia, Redfin agent Tom Lewis has noticed a similar trend among would-be sellers waiting to list until they find a home to buy.
“Trade-up buyers seem to be losing their mojo heading into the heart of the spring selling season,” said Redfin chief economist Nela Richardson. “Repeat buyers tend to list early because they are most often also looking for another home to buy in the near future. A slowdown in new listings reflects a lack of confidence on the part of the homeowner that they can find a desirable home to purchase. This triggers a domino effect down the supply chain that leads to lower sales in tight markets. West coast cities, like, Denver, Portland and Seattle were prime examples of this in April.”
April home sales in many West Coast market saw a year-over-year decline. In Seattle, Portland and Denver, arguably the hottest housing markets in the country, overall inventory remains at historic lows and, while demand has continued to increase, new listings have not. This has led to the most competitive conditions we’ve tracked in these markets, with homes selling faster than anywhere else (8 days), and with the lowest months of supply (1.2) of any market in April. Bidding wars reached their highest level on record in Seattle in April with 77.9 percent of Redfin agents’ offers facing competition, while Portland surged from 58.1 to 68.5 percent, and Denver also ticked up to 66.7 percent. But the lack of growth in listings has begun to constrain sales even with demand as strong as it’s been in years.
With a shock to tech stocks in 2016 and homes priced well over a million dollars, we have started to see fewer buyers ready to do what it takes to buy a home in San Francisco, where home sales have fallen for the second month in a row. There we’ve seen some of the largest increases in inventory and lowest price growth in years, with the majority of that new inventory concentrated in new high-end condos that are now coming on the market. San Francisco homes are still the most expensive (the median sale price in April stood at $1.2 million) and sell for more above list than anywhere in the country, but each month in 2016 has seen year-over-year price increases of less than 10 percent, levels not seen since 2012. The rate of Redfin offers facing bidding wars in San Francisco also fell from 89 percent last year to 82 percent in April.
Despite the mixed picture in the West, sales in all other regions were up year over year, with the Northeast region including Boston (+17.5%,) Providence (+18.7%), and New York (+14.7% in Hudson Valley) seeing the highest growth.
Prices
Sales
Inventory
Competition
You can download data from the March Market Tracker in an Excel spreadsheet. The tables that follow feature Redfin’s largest metro regions. For all of our data coverage, visit the Data Center.
For additional local analysis, see: Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami and Washington, D.C.
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