April Market Reports: The Inventory Drought Takes its Toll on Sales


For the second straight month, the three-year inventory drought punished sales in April, driving them down on every national market report despite demand so strong the prices continued to soar and time on market continued to fall as homes sold a record-setting pace.

Sales fell from 2.3 percent to 4.6 percent on a monthly basis and now trail last year’s sales in two of the three national reports that include sales data.  Insatiable demand pushed prices from 5.2 to 9 percent higher than they were last April, squeezing affordability even more.

“We may be seeing some frustration from buyers,” said Dave Liniger, RE/MAX CEO, Chairman of the Board and Co-Founder. “Inventory is tighter than ever, while strong demand keeps driving up home prices. At the same time, many potential sellers may also be reluctant to list their homes because the tight inventory might impact them as buyers. Home buyers and sellers will need to work with experienced real estate agents to navigate this tough market.”

NAR’s Lawrence Yun concurred. “Demand is easily outstripping supply in most of the country and it’s stymieing many prospective buyers from finding a home to purchase.”

Time on market fell below the record speeds set in March.  NAR reported that listings are now spending less than a month on market before they have a contract.  The median time on realtor.com for clocked by all of its 1.4 million listings in April fell to only 62 days, six days fewer than April 2016 and the lowest number of days on market since the recession, according to realtor.com.   Redfin, NAR and REMAX all reported that months’ supplies in April were dangerously below the six months considered balanced.

  April Market Reports at a Glance

Source

Monthly Sales Trend

Annual Sales Trend

Monthly Price Trend

Annual Price Trend

Median Sale Price

Median Days on Market

Comments

NAR

-2.3%

+1.6%

+3.5%

+6%

$244,800

29

Inventory is not keeping up with the fast pace homes are coming off the market
Realtor.com

NA

NA

+3%

+9%

$269,000

62

Upswing a month earlier than normal
Redfin

-1.6%

-1.2%

+2.8%

+6.2%

$280,000

40

Market is likely to accelerate further
RE/MAX

-4.6%

-4.5%

+.44%

+5.2%

$226,000

57

New low in days on market
Zillow*

NA

NA

+.45%

+7.3%

$198,000

NA

Home values return to Bubble-era peak

*These data are not sale prices but valuations based on Zillow’s AVM.

Inventories grew on realtor.com as the site added 525,000 new listings during the month.  However, buyers gobbled them up almost as quickly as they came on market and the year-over-year inventory deficit reached double-digit levels on realtor.com as well as in REMAX’s and Redfin’s April reports.

April Inventory Watch

Source

Monthly Active Listings

Annual Active Listings

Months of Supply

Comments

NAR

+7.2%

-9%

4.2

Homes in the lower- and mid-market price range are hard to find
Realtor.com

+3%

-12%

NA

Lack of affordable inventory remains a critical issue
RE/MAX

-1.3%

-17.6%

2.8

102nd month of inventory declines
Redfin

-6.0%

-13.3%

3.1

The only record this market can’t break is sales. You need more inventory for that.
Zillow

NA

-7.7%

NA

Inventory, which drives home values and, indirectly, rents, continued to worsen in April.

Median prices rose for the 62nd straight month of year-over-year gains in NAR’s existing home sales series and reached an all-time peak on Zillow, surpassing highest price it reported in the Boom era.  Prices on Zillow rose most in Seattle, Dallas, Tampa, Detroit and Orland. “The only market record this market can’t break is sales. You need more inventory for that!” commented Zillow’s chief economist Svenja Gudell

Though the run-up in home prices is making it harder to buy a home, Gudell reported that rents are squeezing consumers even more than prices. “In the fourth quarter, homeowners spent 15.8 percent of their incomes on a mortgage, which is below the 21 percent that homeowners spent, on average, from 1985 to 2000.  In fact, rent affordability is worse, taking 29.2 percent of renters’ incomes, up from an average of 25.8 percent between 1985 and 2000,” she wrote.



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