Homes For Sale at 7-Year Low

Zillow, Seattle, said for-sale homes in the U.S. fell to their lowest point in seven years in December, with no signs of improving any time soon.

The company’s monthly Real Estate Market Report listed 1.489 million homes for sale in December, 120,000 fewer than a year ago—a drop of 7.5 percent, to the lowest level since Zillow began tracking such data in 2013.

“At the end of 2018, signs of hope emerged that inventory had hit bottom and was starting to dig itself out of a hole,” the report said. “With the benefit of hindsight, it’s clear that the inventory gains in late 2018 were a false dawn due largely to a temporary stock market dip and spike in mortgage rates, not the start of a sustained trend. Now, with mortgage rates lowered again and consumer confidence holding steady, demand shows no signs of abating and eager buyers are snatching up the few homes that are made available.”

Inventory fell year-over-year in 31 of the 35 largest U.S. housing markets, with San Antonio (up 8.1%), Detroit (up 7.6%), Atlanta (up 1.8%) and Chicago (up 0.6%) the only exceptions. Seattle (down 28.5%), San Diego (down 23%) and Sacramento (down 21.7%) saw inventory shrink the most in 2019.

As inventory continues to fall, Zillow said the slowdown in home value growth could be coming to an end as high demand is putting price pressure on the relatively small number of homes that are on the market. The report said the typical home value in the U.S. is $244,054, an increase of 3.7% from a year ago. The rate of annual home value growth slowed once again from November, marking 20 consecutive months in which growth has slowed. But the gap between November and December is the smallest one-month drop since the slowdown began.

Home values grew the most in Phoenix (up 6.5%), Columbus (up 5.9%) and Charlotte (up 5.9%) in 2019. Home values fell in just two markets–San Jose (down 6.4%) and San Francisco (down 1%).

“The end of 2019 looks a whole lot different than we might have expected at the beginning of the year,” said Skylar Olsen, director of economic research with Zillow. “A year ago, a combination of a government shutdown, stock market slump and mortgage rate spike caused a long-anticipated inventory rise. That supposed boom turned out to be a short-lived mirage as buyers came back into the market and more than erased the inventory gains. As a natural reaction, the recent slowdown in home values looks like it’s set to reverse back to accelerating growth right as we head into home shopping season with demand outpacing supply.”

Zillow reported the typical U.S. rent is $1,600, up 2.6% in 2019 but flat from November. Phoenix (up 8.1%) and Charlotte (up 5.3%)–also two of the top markets for home value growth–led the way in 2019, while Columbus–the second-hottest for-sale market–was the only large market in which rents fell last year, dropping 2.5%.