After two years of record-setting activity, there are signs the housing market might
be cooling. High home prices and a surge in mortgage interest rates are slowing
buyer activity, with home sales declining for the third consecutive month under the
weight of soaring homeownership costs. The National Association of REALTORS®
(NAR) reports existing home sales were down 2.4% from the previous month,
while pending sales fell 3.9% as of last measure, extending the trend of recent
months. Economists predict sales will continue to soften in the near future, which
may put downward pressure on home prices.

• Single Family Closed Sales were down 8.7 percent to 6,430.
• Townhouse-Condo Closed Sales were down 6.5 percent to 2,306.
• Adult Communities Closed Sales were down 1.8 percent to 640.
• Single Family Median Sales Price increased 12.6 percent to $490,000.
• Townhouse-Condo Median Sales Price increased 9.1 percent to $349,000.
• Adult Communities Median Sales Price increased 27.5 percent to $325,000.

The slowdown in sales has provided a much-needed lift to housing supply, with
inventory up 10.8% from the previous month according to NAR, although supply
remains down 10.4% compared to this time last year, with only 2.2 months’
supply of homes at the current sales pace. As the nation continues to explore
ways to solve the ongoing housing shortage, estimated at 5.5 million homes, the
Biden administration recently unveiled the Housing Supply Action Plan, which
aims to expand housing access through a number of administrative and legislative
actions and help relieve the nation’s housing crisis over the next 5 year