Inventory
Weekly Market Report

U.S. housing starts fell 14.8% month-over-month in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,331,000 units, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Single-family starts dropped 4.7% from the previous month, while multi-family starts declined 35.8%. Although construction was down for the month, builder sentiment continues to improve, rising to the highest level since August 2023, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) / Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI).
IN THE TWIN CITIES REGION, FOR THE WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 24:
- New Listings increased 48.6% to 1,138
- Pending Sales increased 7.0% to 799
- Inventory increased 5.7% to 6,537
FOR THE MONTH OF JANUARY:
- Median Sales Price increased 3.1% to $352,500
- Days on Market decreased 8.2% to 56
- Percent of Original List Price Received increased 0.7% to 96.7%
- Months Supply of Homes For Sale increased 28.6% to 1.8
All comparisons are to 2023
Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report. From MAAR Market Data News.
Is This a Good Time to Buy a House? Your Guide to the Housing Market THREE QUESTIONS TO DECIDE IF THIS IS A GOOD TIME FOR YOU TO BUY A HOUSE
WHAT’S THE ALTERNATIVE?
Where will you live if you don’t buy a house? If you rent a house instead of purchasing a house, you’ll likely be subject to rising rent costs with no real benefit. That’s because none of your rent payments are going toward building equity. On the other hand, if you buy a house, at least a portion of your monthly payment is going toward a principal reduction on the mortgage balance. This means you’ll be building equity even if the home doesn’t go up in value.
WHAT’S YOUR TIME HORIZON FOR LIVING IN THE HOME?
If your time horizon is more than 4 years, buying a home in a market like this would likely make sense for you. Here’s why: home price appreciation has slowed down a little from the break-neck speed of the past few years. Keep in mind that the fundamentals of the housing market are still strong: demand is greater than supply and will be so for quite some time because we have a housing shortage in the US. This means that even if house prices decline in the near term, they’ll likely start to climb again during the next few years.
In the meantime, what happens if you want to sell the property and the next buyer doesn’t want to pay you as much or more than what you paid? Here’s a potential scenario to consider: let’s say you buy a home and home values immediately drop by 10%, then they start going up by 4.46% per year, which is the long-term average home appreciation rate in the US. It would take roughly 4 years for you to break even and start building wealth through homeownership. In a potentially bad-case scenario like that, are you willing to keep the house for at least 4 years?
IS THE HOME AFFORDABLE FOR YOU?
Wages have increased considerably in the past year and are likely to keep rising because there are over 9 million job openings in today’s economy. If you tune out all the noise that’s not specific to you, is the home you want to buy affordable for you given your specific income/employment situation? There’s no one-size-fits-all solution in today’s market. That’s why it’s important to run the numbers for yourself, consider the alternatives, and make your own decision. I’m here to help in any way I can!
Credit/Original Source: CertfiedRealEstateAdvisor
Mortgage Rates Increase for the Fourth Consecutive Week

February 29, 2024
Mortgage rates continued their ascent this week, reaching a two-month high and flirting with seven percent yet again. The recent boomerang in rates has dampened already tentative homebuyer momentum approaching the spring, a historically busy season for homebuying. While sales of newly built homes are trending in a positive direction, higher rates and elevated prices continue to pose affordability challenges that may leave potential homebuyers on the sidelines.
Information provided by Freddie Mac.
Home Designer Shares ‘Ins’ and ‘Outs’ for 2024
Interior design expert Morgan Olsen says these are the fads to watch.
What home improvement projects should your clients take on this year? After crunching the latest data from Thumbtack, a home services website, design expert Morgan Olsen chimes in with her picks for the “ins” and “outs” of the new year.
IN: Smarter homes
Photo credit: ArchiViz / Getty Images
Engineering and technical design services have jumped 105% year over year as more homeowners seek to invest in smart-home upgrades. This may include everything from remotely controlled appliances to smart thermostats and light installations. Olsen predicts these installations will continue to be “hot” in 2024, with homeowners interested in adding convenient and cost-efficient capabilities to their everyday lifestyle.
OUT: Climate change destroying homes
Climate change has been blamed on bringing more unpredictable weather to cities across the U.S., from historic floods to devastating tornadoes. Many homeowners are investing in upgrades and repairs to keep their houses immune to nature’s wrath. Home waterproofing is up 86% year over year, foundation repairs have risen 64%, window installations and repairs are both up 53%, and general structural engineering services are up 61%.
IN: Scented design
Photo credit: Veranika Smirnaya / Getty Images
Olsen believes a room’s scent will become a key design feature for homeowners. Much like a new mirror or accent chair, scent is strongly influencing design aesthetics in 2024. Odor removal requests are up 46% from a year ago, according to Thumbtack data.
OUT: White
The maximalist, grandma-chic style will reign supreme in 2024, as more homeowners get louder with the colors and patterns they choose to decorate their home. Instead of all-white homes, Olsen predicts more tans and almonds, ushering back in the brown feel that took over the 2010s. On the other hand, some homeowners are ditching paint entirely—paint removal is up 60% compared to a year ago—and turning to other materials, like wooden accents, to switch up their home’s design.
Credit/Original Source: National Association of Realtors
New Listings and Pending Sales
Inventory
Weekly Market Report

Housing inventory improved for the third month in a row, with the number of homes actively for sale in January increasing 7.9% year-over-year, according to Realtor.com’s January 2024 Monthly Housing Market Trends Report. Lower mortgage rates appear to have brought some sellers back to the market, as the number of newly listed homes rose 2.8% year-over-year. While this is good news for prospective homebuyers, the supply of homes for sale remains down compared to typical 2017 – 2019 levels.
IN THE TWIN CITIES REGION, FOR THE WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 17:
- New Listings increased 14.7% to 1,090
- Pending Sales increased 11.2% to 792
- Inventory increased 4.9% to 6,451
FOR THE MONTH OF JANUARY:
- Median Sales Price increased 3.1% to $352,500
- Days on Market decreased 8.2% to 56
- Percent of Original List Price Received increased 0.7% to 96.7%
- Months Supply of Homes For Sale increased 28.6% to 1.8
All comparisons are to 2023
Click here for the full Weekly Market Activity Report. From MAAR Market Data News.
Wait, What? Things Are Looking Up for Homebuyers? By Holden Lewis
Buyers have had it rough, but some experts think 2024 will see improvement in mortgage rates, home prices and availability of both new and existing homes for sale.
You feel demoralized about the housing market, right? Hold on. After a grim 2022 and 2023, it looks like 2024 is shaping up to be less hostile to home buyers.
Here’s a summary of what’s been rotten in the state of housing: Home prices skyrocketed from the middle of 2020 to mid-2022. Then, mortgage rates took off, and the 30-year fixed-rate home loan crested at almost 8% in October 2023. Home buyers struggled with affordability as high-interest rates eroded their borrowing power. They had few homes to choose from, anyway.
Meanwhile, rising rents made it harder to save up a down payment – or simply to find an affordable place to rent. The typical tenant’s annual rent went up 6% in 2022, and another 8% in 2023, after rising less than 4% each year in the previous 14 years.
It’s been a rough few years. But 2024 might see improvement in mortgage rates, home prices, and availability of both new and existing homes for sale. Buying a home won’t be easy in 2024, but it might be less frustrating than in 2022 and 2023.
Mortgage rates should keep falling
The most important development involves mortgage rates. They have improved since autumn. In January, the average rate on the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 6.64% in Freddie Mac’s weekly survey. That was down from October’s average of 7.62%.
That drop of nearly one percentage point makes a big difference in affordability: It would cut $198 off the monthly payment on a $300,000 loan.
If inflation finally cools off, as it’s expected to, forecasters believe mortgage rates will fall further. Fannie Mae and the Mortgage Bankers Association predict the 30-year mortgage will average somewhere around 6% in the fourth quarter of 2024, down from 7.3% at the end of 2023.
Consumers feel pretty optimistic about rates, too. In Fannie Mae’s latest monthly survey of consumers, 36% of respondents said they expect mortgage rates to fall over the next 12 months. That’s the highest proportion in the National Housing Survey’s history, going back to June 2010.
Home prices are rising more slowly
Home prices, unlike mortgage rates, probably won’t fall in 2024. But they won’t go up as fast as they did from August 2020 through June 2022, when prices rose a startling 33.3% in less than two years.
The price increases have already slowed down. In December 2023, the median resale price of an existing home was $382,600, according to the National Association of Realtors. That was only 4.4% higher than the same month a year earlier.
Even though price increases have tapped the brakes, home buyers are still struggling from those two years of accelerated prices.
“Because the country is still faced with affordability challenges, it’s really hard to see any force that would push home prices dramatically higher this year,” said Mike Simonsen, president of Altos Research, a real estate analytics firm, in a mid-January YouTube commentary.
Builders sell homes at lower price points
Another factor promises to prevent prices from running away: Home builders are diligently adding to the housing stock. They completed a little over a million single-family houses in 2023 and 450,000 multi-unit dwellings (everything from duplexes to high-rise apartments).
Construction is still going strong. Going into 2024, 1.65 million housing units were being built, and builders were breaking ground on more houses and fewer apartments.
The pace of construction helps buyers who want more homes to choose from. At the end of 2022, a total of 1.42 million new and existing homes were for sale. At the end of 2023, the number was 1.45 million. Not a ton of improvement, but at least the number of homes for sale is moving in favor of home buyers.
In another positive development, home builders have shifted to lower price points, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The change happened quickly. In December 2022, 38% of newly built single-family houses cost less than $400,000. In December 2023, that portion had grown to 47%. We’re talking single-family houses, not condos.
But will sellers show up?
When you combine these trends – falling interest rates, moderation in house prices and vigorous home construction – it’s easy for an optimist to conclude that houses will become more affordable in 2024. The question is: Will homeowners continue to limit progress by keeping their homes off the resale market?
Of homeowners with mortgages, almost half have home loans with rates of 3.5% or lower, according to data compiled by the Urban Institute, an economic policy think tank. With mortgage rates well above 6% today, these homeowners have an incentive to stay where they are instead of selling, then swapping their low mortgage rates for higher rates on their next home. This phenomenon, known as rate lock-in, restricts the supply of homes available for sale, even as demand remains strong.
“By and large, inventory is still going to be pretty low as people are kind of staying in their homes,” says Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist for Bright MLS, a real estate database in the mid-Atlantic region. “And so prices, you know, will probably still go up in most places.”
She adds: “If you’re a buyer, I think it’s still going to be a tricky market, a tight market, particularly if you’re coming in as a first-time buyer.”
Yet there’s room for hope. Yes, people want to keep their low-rate mortgages. But people outgrow their homes, or feel the urge to downsize, or need to relocate, or just plain get sick and tired of where they’re living and long for new digs.
Simonsen, in a YouTube commentary on Feb. 12, pointed to an 18% jump in home listings in the first week of February compared with the previous week. “Each week, we can see more sellers testing the market. More buyers are finding their opportunities as well,” he said. The upshot is that the inventory of unsold homes keeps building. That gives buyers more selection to choose from and should limit the rise of prices.
Get ready to rumble
If this partly sunny outlook is accurate, the topmost advice when buying a house in 2024 is to prepare for competition when you make an offer on a home. Get preapproved for a mortgage, get ready to settle for a “good enough” place instead of a dream home, and if you lose a bidding war, brush yourself off and keep looking.
© 2024 WCMH, Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. All rights reserved.
Credit/Original Source: FloridaRealtors.Org
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