LendingOne’s top-line findings:
- The number of homes for sale is rising in most of the country on a year-over-year basis. Investors out shopping are seeing more leverage, in most markets, now than two years ago.
- Inventory for sale on a national level is still limited, which explains why spiked mortgage rates haven’t created more price declines thus far.
- Active listings remain tightest across markets in the Northeast and Midwest, while there’s greater softening happening in parts of the Southwest, including many Texas markets, and the Southeast, including many Florida markets.
The 5 states that have seen the biggest increase in active inventory for sale over the past 12 months:
- Florida: +71%
- Vermont: +62%
- Arizona: +54%
- Georgia: +53%
- Hawaii: +50%
The 5 states where inventory is still most below pre-pandemic levels:
- Connecticut: -76%
- New Jersey: -69%
- Illinois: -67%
- Vermont: -67%
- Rhode Island: -64%
Just these 3 states have seen inventory climb above pre-pandemic levels:
- Texas: +5%
- Idaho: +4%
- Florida: +0.4%