Price of Existing Homes Rose at a Blistering Year-Over-Year Pace of 23.4%
The National Association or Realtors reports Existing-Home Sales Expand 1.4% in June That is from […]
The National Association or Realtors reports Existing-Home Sales Expand 1.4% in June
That is from a negative 0.3 percentage point revision. The lead chart puts sales into a better light. The key data is price and speed.
Key Details
- Existing-home sales rose 1.4% on a seasonally adjusted annual rate from May to June, with no region showing a sales decline.
- The inventory of unsold homes increased 3.3% to 1.25 million from May to June – equivalent to 2.6 months of the monthly sales pace.
- The median existing-home price for all housing types in June was $363,300, up 23.4% from June 2020 ($294,400), as every region recorded price jumps. This marks 112 straight months of year-over-year gains.
- The price increase is the second highest level recorded since January 1999.
- Homes on the market typically sold in 17 days.
- Eighty-nine percent of homes sold in June 2021 were on the market for less than a month.
By Region
- Existing-home sales in the Northeast increased 2.8% in June, recording an annual rate of 740,000, a 45.1% rise from a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $412,800, up 23.6% from June 2020.
- Existing-home sales in the Midwest rose 3.1% to an annual rate of 1,330,000 in June, an 18.8% increase from a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was $278,700, an 18.5% increase from June 2020.
- Existing-home sales in the South were unchanged from May, posting an annual rate of 2,590,000 in June, up 19.4% from the same time one year ago. The median price in the South was $311,600, a 21.4% climb from one year ago.
- Existing-home sales in the West rose 1.7%, registering an annual rate of 1,200,000 in June, a 23.7% jump from a year ago. The median price in the West was $507,000, up 17.6% from June 2020.