US Housing News
The U.S. housing market has shown a modest thaw over the past 48 hours, but conditions remain constrained by high borrowing costs and tight inventory. Existing home sales rose 3.2 percent in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.17 million, above forecasts, while the median existing home price reached a record May level of 429,300 dollars and inventory edged up to 1.55 million homes, equal to 4.5 months of supply.[1][2] That is an improvement from the slower pace seen earlier this spring, but it does not yet signal a broad recovery. Mortgage rates remain elevated at about 6.50 percent as of June 8, which continues to weigh on affordability and keeps many buyers cautious.[8] At the same time, some markets are cooling rather than accelerating. In Austin, for example, the median sale price fell 2.3 percent year over year in the three months ending in May, even as sales volume rose, showing how local conditions can diverge sharply from the national trend.[7] Recent reporting also points to shifting consumer behavior. Buyers are taking longer to act, while sellers in some areas are delisting homes rather than cutting prices, suggesting pressure is building on the supply side as demand softens.[4] Bank of America notes that days on market are rising year over year and active listings are up about 10 percent, reinforcing the view that the market is moving toward a slower, more balanced phase.[6] For industry leaders, the response is increasingly tactical: pricing more carefully, managing longer listing times, and adjusting to a market where affordability remains the main barrier. Compared with prior reporting, the latest data suggest a market that is thawing at the margins, but still far from a full rebound.[1][6][8] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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