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Housing Inventory’s Downward Slide

Realtor.com’s November Monthly Housing Report found that the number of available homes is declining at an “accelerating pace” in the nation’s largest metros. 

Inventory fell 9.5% in November—growing from last month’s 6.9% drop and amounts to the loss of 131,000 listings compared to last year. The volume of new inventory hitting the market decreased by 7.7% since November 2018.

Housing inventory in the 50 largest U.S. metro fell year-over-year by 8.8% in November. San Diego, California, saw the biggest inventory drop at 28.1%, followed by Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Arizona (24.1%) and Rochester, New York (22.4%). 

Four of the 50 largest metros saw inventory increase over the past year. The largest increases were in Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, Nevada (14.4%); Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, Minnesota-Wisconsin (11.5%); and San Antonio, New Braunfels, Texas (72%).

Nationally, homes sold in 70 days in November—two days quicker than in November 2018. Raleigh, North Carolina; Hartford, Connecticut; and Birmingham-Hoover, Alabama saw the largest declines in days on the market at 10, 10, and nine, few days on the market respectively. 

Homes in Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, California; San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, California; and Las Vegas sold 20, 12, and 10 days slower. 

Median-home prices grew by 3.6% nationally to $309,000 in November, which is behind the prior months’ 4.3% price growth. The Los Angeles metro had the nation’s highest average price increase at 16.6%.

San Jose had the highest average list price of nearly $1.1 million. Cleveland-Elyria, Ohio has the nation’s lowest average listing price of $185,000, which is a 0.3% increase from November 2018.

Additionally, 19.5% of all listing saw their prices fall from the prior year in November. The metro of Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, Oregon-Washington, saw the highest increase in price reductions in November at 8%. This was followed by Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky-Indiana (5.2%); and Birmingham (4.%)

About Author: Mike Albanese

A graduate of the University of Alabama, Mike Albanese has worked for news publications since 2011 in Texas and Colorado. He has built a portfolio of more than 1,000 articles, covering city government, police and crime, business, sports, and is experienced in crafting engaging features and enterprise pieces. He spent time as the sports editor for the "Pilot Point Post-Signal," and has covered the DFW Metroplex for several years. He has also assisted with sports coverage and editing duties with the "Dallas Morning News" and "Denton Record-Chronicle" over the past several years.
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