We’re watching the data roll in each week, and frankly it keeps surprising me. The median price of newly listed homes is climbing, and price reductions continue to fall across the country more quickly than I expected. Inventory was basically flat this week.
Do these early signals of 2023 price support continue into the springtime peak of the market?
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I’m Mike Simonsen, I’m the founder of Altos Research. Here’s what the data looks like for the third week of January 2023.
Let’s start this week with price reductions. The percent of single family homes on the market that have taken a recent price cut fell again this week to 34.7%. That’s 1.1% fewer than just last week. It is normal for price cuts to decline in the first quarter of course. New inventory gets listed, and new listings don’t cut prices until they sit around for a couple months. We also have the first of the spring buying season so turnover of some that were on the market last fall, took price cuts, are now taking offers too. So it’s normal for price cuts to decline in January.
You can see the market resiliency in the asking prices and the leading indicators for too. The median price of single family homes across the country ticked up again this week to $410,000. That’s just a quarter percent higher than last week. Last year at this time home prices were accelerating very quickly with bidding wars and over bidding all over the place. So even as home prices are climbing now, which is normal for January, they’re climbing less quickly than last year, so the year over year price change is compressing.
Even if you assume a recession still hits later in the year, American home owners are in a really strong financial position. The market is not getting weaker at this time.
The median price of the newly listed homes this week also climbed. This is the time of year when we want to see how steep the pricing of the new listings is. That’s the light colored line here. The market is now past the new year’s holiday reset. New listings start coming to market for the spring season. And this light red line here shows us everything the sellers and the listing agents know about their local markets. They know if there are buyers, if there are shoppers at the open house, or if not and they price each new listing accordingly. I know if the inventory is rapidly climbing in my neighborhood I need to discount to make sure my home gets attention. I also know if I don’t need that. The steep incline of the light red line here at the far right end of the chart shows us January buyer demand and price resilience for the next few months of home sales.
Inventory of homes for sale was flat week over week. Actually down just a few hundred homes but lets call it unchanged. It’s perfectly normal for inventory to bounce a little in January but have basically found the bottom before turning up in earnest in February. The last few years inventory kept falling into March or April. Our inventory forecast model expects another basically flat week next week before February starts to climb. If inventory keeps falling later in February, that will be a big indicator of a much tighter supply/demand curve that we’ve been expecting. We expect supply to increase in February. But we also know that sellers are being very stingy now, holding on to their existing homes, with ultra cheap mortgages. If they stay tight and the supply side of the supply / demand curve stays low or declines, that would yet another signal for surprising home price strength this year. We have 36% fewer homes on the market now than we did in 2020 just before the pandemic. That gap is no longer closing.
When I say the supply of new listings is really low this is what I mean. We had 54,000 new single family listings across the country this week. Last year we had 63,000 new listings in the third week of January. Last year 20,000 of those went into contract immediately - so then we coupled very tight supply with very high demand. This year we have even tighter supply and low but rising demand.
You can see how new supply should generally keep rising until July 4th. You can also see here how we’re on the new low-supply cycle since July 4th last year when we had a dramatic drop in new listings, a step down, from which we have not recovered. Again, it’s hard to be too worried about a big price correction this year when the supply and demand curve doesn’t support it.
And as far as demand goes, we can see that significantly lower demand in our pendings numbers. We have 249,000 single family homes in the contract pending stage this week. That’s a 1% increase from last week and the New Year’s annual lows. There are 31% fewer homes in contract now than last year at this time. There were 23% fewer new pendings this week than last year at this time.
This tells us that demand is obviously lighter than during the frenzy last year. But that we’re closing the gap that opened up in the 4th quarter. In this chart each bar is a week with the total count of homes pending contract. The light part of the bar are those newly in contract. It’s January so it’s just starting to grow each week. We’re not going to get back to the bidding wars of the last few years any time soon. But this shows us that buyer demand seems to bounced off the bottom. Because the pendings numbers are so low, these are sales that will complete in the next few months, so those sales headlines will remain low into February and March. It’s a contrast from the green shoots of optimism we’re seeing in the real time data right now.
This is of course national data and the local markets are behaving very differently from each other right now. If you need to get your local data to your buyers and sellers right now, you should join us at Altos Research. Go to AltosResearch.com and book time with our team to learn how to interpret the market signals for the people who need it most right now. They need you to be the expert for them.
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