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New Listings Work to Keep Pace with Housing Demand

According to a new report from Redfin [1], the number of newly listed homes for sale during the four weeks ending February 20 was down just 2% year-over-year—the smallest decline since mid-November.

A larger pool of new listings were met with large demand, although pending sales only rose 1%, the first increase since mid-January. The market set new record highs again for home sale prices, asking prices, buyers’ mortgage payments, and the share of homes selling within days of hitting the market. A new all-time low for the total number of homes for sale was also reported.

”The good news for homebuyers is that each week more homes are being listed for sale,” said Redfin Deputy Chief Economist Taylor Marr. “There is growing evidence that January’s dramatic drop in new listings was only a temporary blip driven by heavy winter storms and the spike in Covid cases, so homebuyers may have some hope for better selection in the coming spring season.”

Some key housing market takeaways for 400+ U.S. metro areas are as follows:

Other leading indicators of homebuying activity included mortgage purchase applications decreasing 10% week-over-week during the week ending February 18. For the week ending February 24, 30-year mortgage rates dropped slightly, falling to 3.89%.

According to ShowingTime, touring activity through February 20 was 17 percentage points ahead of 2021, and 2 points behind 2020 relative to the first week of January. Overall, the Redfin Homebuyer Demand Index rose 6% during the week ending February 20, and was up 15% from a year earlier.

To view the full report, including charts and methodology, click here [2].