The 3 Charts That Will Define the Spring Housing Market
With spring officially here, the busy season has officially begun for buying and selling homes. With that in mind, UrbanTurf looked at what we think will be the three metrics that will define the DC-area market in the coming months.
Not much will likely change in the coming months for what has been the biggest story in the local real estate market: the severe shortage of homes for sale. Consider the trajectory of housing supply over the last 24 months: two years ago there was a two-month supply, which then dropped to about a month in 2020. The supply fell below the one-month level in January for the first time and could stay around that level into spring. For context, the benchmark for a balanced housing supply is six months, a level that the region hasn't seen in years.
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Contract ratio compares the total number of homes under contract in a given period to the overall number of active listings, making it a good marker for the level of competition. For years, the contract ratio in the DC area rarely rose higher than 1.0, but for the last 12 months, it has regularly been at or above that level. In February, it hit 1.40, its highest level on record. If it stays in this range, it points to a very competitive market in the coming months for buyers. And that competition is already being seen in the market: in the last week, UrbanTurf has heard of three listings getting upwards of 25 offers each.
Two things happened in the February housing market that could give a sense of what will happen this spring. Home prices were at or near their highest level on record for the month, but so were sales. In other words, rising prices did nothing to dampen buyer interest. The path of interest rates in the coming weeks will likely have an effect on buyer demand in the region; if they don't shoot up, that demand will likely remain high.
Photo courtesy of TruPlace.
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This article originally published at https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/the-3-charts-that-will-define-the-spring-housing-market/18044.
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