Inventory
Weekly Market Report
High home prices are the most common reason prospective buyers have yet to purchase a home, with 39% of active buyers mentioning high sales prices as the primary deterrent to not finding a home in Q2 2021, according to a recent Housing Trends report from the National Association of Home Builders. This is a change from the previous two quarters, where interested buyers reported being outbid by other offers as the most common reason for not purchasing a home.
In the Twin Cities region, for the week ending August 14:
- New Listings decreased 11.7% to 1,697
- Pending Sales decreased 8.0% to 1,503
- Inventory decreased 19.3% to 7,901
For the month of July:
- Median Sales Price increased 11.9% to $350,000
- Days on Market decreased 53.7% to 19
- Percent of Original List Price Received increased 3.5% to 103.6%
- Months Supply of Homes For Sale decreased 30.0% to 1.4
All comparisons are to 2020
Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report. From MAAR Market Data News.
Existing Home Sales
Twin Cities Housing Market Returning to Historic Trends
(August 17, 2021) – According to new data from the Minneapolis Area REALTORS® and the Saint Paul Area Association of REALTORS®, buyer activity in the month of July more closely resembled a typical, pre-pandemic summer than the frenzied buying spree seen over the last year or so. Demand as measured by pending sales was down 11.2 percent from July 2020 but was flat compared to July 2019.
Meanwhile, seller activity in the Twin Cities Metro increased for a fourth consecutive month. The number of homes listed on the market during the month was up 0.7 percent from last year, partly a result of the pullback in seller activity last spring and summer.
“Buyer activity was remarkably strong around this time last year,” said Tracy Baglio, President of the Saint Paul Area Association of REALTORS®. “It’s important to put softening sales figures in context. We’re returning to a more typical market in line with the past five years. Compared to the frenzied pace of Summer 2020, that appears to be a slowdown, but it’s really just ‘normalization.’” Overall, sellers are still firmly in control of this market; that hasn’t changed. With just 1.3 months supply of inventory, the metro remains a sellers’ market. Historically, six months of supply is considered a balanced market.
Another hallmark of supply-constrained markets is fast market times. The median number of days a property remained on market declined 58.8 percent to seven days. In other words, half of the pending sales in July had accepted offers within a week of being listed. On the other hand, home prices were up 11.9 percent from last July to arrive at $350,000 for the month. That’s even with June, even though prices tend to reach their seasonal peak in June.
“With offers still coming in at an average of 3.6 percent over original asking price, more people are understanding the strength of this market,” according to Todd Walker, President of Minneapolis Area REALTORS®. “Any supply increase can readily be absorbed by the record demand in the marketplace, and any rebalancing or adjustment will take some time to play out.”
Activity varies by area, price point and property type. Sales of single-family homes were up 3.4 percent in Minneapolis and level in St. Paul, suggesting demand remained strong in the core cities. Condos were the only property type to grow in year over year sales. Across the 16-county Twin Cities region condo sales rose 8.6 percent. Sales of previously owned homes fell 2.5 percent while new construction dropped 23.9 percent.
July 2021 by the numbers compared to a year ago
-
- Sellers listed 8,139 properties on the market, a 0.7 percent increase from last July
- Buyers signed 6,202 purchase agreements, down 11.3 percent (6,695 closed sales, down 5.2 percent)
- Inventory levels fell 25.3 percent to 7,590 units
- Month’s Supply of Inventory was down 35.0 percent to 1.3 month (4-6 months is balanced)
- The Median Sales Price rose 11.9 percent to $350,000
- Days on Market decreased 53.7 percent to 19 days, on average (median of 7 days, down 58.8 percent)
- Changes in Sales activity varied by market segment
- Single family sales were down 5.5 percent; condo sales rose 8.6 percent; townhome sales decreased 5.3 percent
- Traditional sales fell 4.2 percent; foreclosure sales were down 54.5 percent; short sales fell 42.9 percent
- Previously owned sales were down 2.5 percent; new construction sales dropped 23.9 percent
New Listings and Pending Sales
Inventory
Weekly Market Report
America’s housing shortage may be starting to ease up, with new listings up 6.5% year-over-year in July, making it the fourth consecutive month of annual increases, according to realtor.com’s Monthly Housing Report. More than half of the nation’s 50 largest metropolitan areas reported double-digit increases in new listings, which may suggest the market is beginning to normalize after the record-breaking activity seen during the pandemic.
In the Twin Cities region, for the week ending August 7:
- New Listings increased 1.7% to 1,939
- Pending Sales decreased 18.6% to 1,414
- Inventory decreased 23.1% to 7,605
For the month of July:
- Median Sales Price increased 11.9% to $350,000
- Days on Market decreased 53.7% to 19
- Percent of Original List Price Received increased 3.5% to 103.6%
- Months Supply of Homes For Sale decreased 30.0% to 1.4
All comparisons are to 2020
Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report. From MAAR Market Data News.
New Listings and Pending Sales
Inventory
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