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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Business
Steve Brown

Home sellers asking more as demand for housing soars

With housing inventories at record lows, home sellers are asking more for their properties.

Median home sale listing prices in August grew by 10% nationally in August _ the largest such increase in 15 years according to Realtor.com

In Dallas-Fort Worth, the median home sales listing price was up only 3.5% from August 2019.

D-FW's home listing price rose to $360,000, higher than the nationwide median of $350,000, according to Realtor.com.

While housing activity typically begins to cool in late summer and fall, there's no sign of a slowdown in the fast-paced homebuying market that's fueled by record low mortgage rates.

"It's difficult to imagine that the housing market will be able to sustain the frenzied demand we are currently experiencing, but we have yet to see any signs of slowing," Realtor.com chief economist Danielle Hale said in the new report. "Buyer traffic on Realtor.com is outpacing the record levels we saw earlier this year, suggesting that demand will continue to exceed the number of available homes for sale.

"Although demand is much more intense than it normally is this late into a buying season, the typical home asking price has likely peaked for the year at $350,000," she said. "However, given the strong demand, sellers will remain in the driver's seat for the foreseeable future."

The surge in buying and fewer sellers during the pandemic has dropped home sales inventories in the D-FW area by more than 40% from August 2019, Realtor.com reports.

Homes sold in the area last month were on the market for a median of 46 days.

But local real estate agents report many properties are going under contract the day they hit the market and have multiple offers.

In July, North Texas home sales hit a record one-month total _ up 25% from a year earlier.

And the median price of single-family homes sold by area real estate agents was 9% higher than in July 2019.

On the national level, the biggest increases in home asking prices in August were in northeast and Midwestern markets, including Philadelphia (up 18.6%), Cincinnati (up 17.8%) and Boston (up 14.7%).

Miami was the only major U.S. market that saw a slight decline in home asking prices.

Among Texas markets, the largest increase in listing prices was in the Austin area where sellers were asking 10.7% more than last year.

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