Buyers are pulling back hard in metro Denver housing market, but so are sellers

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Even after more than doubling the past year, the number of listings is still under half of the historical average for October of 14,597 in tallies going back to 1985.

That tug of war between reduced demand and lower supply caused the inventory of active listings, which had been rising sharply this summer, to reverse course. There were 7,290 homes and condos listed for sale at the end of October, down 5.1% from the number listed at the end of September.

Over the past 12 months, the number of listings is up 116%, which seems like a huge increase, but it comes off very low levels. And the supply hasn’t reached pre-pandemic levels of the 8,557 listings available in October 2019. “While our market changes, the point that has been largely overlooked is that the last two years have been the exception and certainly not the rule. If we were to remove 2020 and 2021 from the record books, our market trajectory is on pace with where it should be had COVID-19 not happened,” said Libby-Levinson-Katz, chairwoman of the DMAR Market Trends Committee and a Denver Realtor.

Home prices were the most noticeable things to go whacky since the summer of 2020. But they are falling back to earth fast. The median price for a single-family home fell 1.2 percent between September and October to $622,490. For the year it is still up 6.5%. The median closing price of condos and townhomes fell 1.22% to $405,000 on the month and remains up 8% on the year.

 

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