Trulia Reports Homebuyers Face Largest Year-Over-Year Drop In For-Sale Inventory Since 2013

2017-12-14 / @newswire

 

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 14, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Trulia®, a home and neighborhood resource for homebuyers and renters, released the findings from its quarterly Trulia Inventory and Price Watch. This quarter's report found that while starter and trade-up home inventory decreased again at double-digit rates, premium homes saw the biggest declines in more than four years, at 5.9%. In addition, homes are now the most unaffordable since Trulia started keeping track in 2012.

2017 Q4 Inventory

Change, 2016 Q4 - 2017 Q4

Housing
Segment

Median
List
Price

Share

Inventory

% of
income
needed
to buy
median
price
home in
segment

%
change in
median
list price

Percentage
point
change
in share

%
change
in
inventory

Additional
share of
income
needed to
buy a home
(percentage
point
change)

Starter

$178,034

22.9%

237,361

39.8%

8.0%

-1.9 pts

-19.0%

1.7 pts

Trade-Up

$302,893

24.0%

250,852

25.8%

5.9%

0.0 pts

-11.4%

0.6 pts

Premium

$631,358

53.1%

559,252

14.0%

6.8%

+1.9 pts

-5.9%

0.3 pts

Trulia Logo (PRNewsFoto/Trulia)

U.S. Housing Inventory Decreases 10.5% in the Fourth Quarter

In the fourth quarter, U.S. housing inventory saw its steepest fall since 2013, dropping 10.5% from this time last year, with the biggest drop across housing segments occurring among starter homes. While starter and trade-up homes took another dip this quarter, premium homes also saw an uncharacteristically large drop of 5.9% from this time last year. Metros that led the charge in the premium dip, included San Jose, Calif., Salt Lake City and Rochester, N.Y.

Markets with Largest Decrease in Premium Home Inventory in the Last Year

U.S. Metro

% Change in
premium inventory

Percentage point change in inventory share

Starter

Trade-up

Premium

San Jose, CA

-41.7%

-3.4%

-2.6%

6.1%

Salt Lake City, UT

-38.1%

10.3%

3.4%

-13.7%

Rochester, NY

-30.5%

2.7%

1.4%

-4.1%

Colorado Springs, CO

-27.3%

-7.4%

-3.8%

11.2%

Bakersfield, CA

-27.0%

0.9%

-2.1%

1.2%

Despite Sharp Fall, Premium Homes Still Occupy Larger Share of the Market

Amid the biggest year-over-year drop in inventory, premium homes now occupy the largest percent of the market than any quarter since 2012. Adding to the obstacles for first-time buyers, premium homes now account for 53.1% of all available inventory. Since this time last year, the percentage share of the market of premium homes increased 1.9 percentage points. This compares to no change in trade-up homes and a 1.9 percentage-point drop in starter homes. Among the 100 largest U.S. metros, eight of the top 10 markets that saw the largest fall in premium inventory are still seeing an increase in the share of premium homes on the market. While premium homebuyers are seeing historic dips, it is starter home buyers that are feeling the impact.

Starter Homebuyers Continue Feeling Unaffordability Pinch

Paired with falling inventory and an increasing share of premium homes, declines in affordability plagued homebuyers, specifically those looking for starter homes. Across the national housing market and across all segments, homes are the most unaffordable they have been since 2012 and today, first-time homebuyers will need to spend 39.8% – nearly a third more than the amount recommended – of their monthly income to buy a starter home – a 1.7 percentage point increase from last year. Comparatively, trade-up and premium homebuyers will need to spend 25.8% (up 0.6 percentage points from the same period a year ago) and 14.0% (up 0.3 percentage points from last year) of their income to buy a home, respectively.

QUOTES FROM TRULIA'S CHIEF ECONOMIST RALPH MCLAUGHLIN:

  • "While the inventory crunch continues, I'm cautiously optimistic that 2018 will be a year for inventory rebound. Not only is American optimism about selling homes at levels not seen since 2014, 16% of homeowners plan to sell a home in the next two years. If we see them follow through, there may finally be an uptick in inventory."
  • "While the number of premium homes on the market have seen a sharp fall, they continue to make up a larger share of the for-sale market, which spells trouble for first-time homebuyers. Coupled with record-low inventory, saving enough money for a down payment will continue to be their biggest obstacle to homeownership."

About the Trulia Inventory and Price Watch
The Trulia Inventory and Price Watch offers buyers and sellers deeper insight into the change in supply and affordability of homes, within three different segments of the market: starter homes, trade-up homes, and premium homes. Based on the for-sale homes listed on Trulia, this report calculates housing inventory within each segment nationally and in the 100 largest U.S. metros, from Oct. 1 to Dec. 1, 2017. For the full report and methodology, see here.

About Trulia
Trulia is a vibrant home shopping marketplace, focused on giving homebuyers, sellers, and renters the information they need to make better decisions. On mobile and the Web, Trulia provides house hunters with insights and unique information about properties, neighborhoods, and real estate agents. Additionally, Trulia offers data and information about schools, crimes, commute times, and the real estate market.

Launched in 2005, Trulia is based in San Francisco and is owned and operated by Zillow Group (NASDAQ: Z and ZG).

Trulia is a registered trademark of Trulia, LLC.

MEDIA CONTACT:

Debbie Baratz
pr@trulia.com
415-757-2299

 

Trulia Reports Homebuyers Face Largest Year-Over-Year Drop In For-Sale Inventory Since 2013

Cision View original content with multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/trulia-reports-homebuyers-face-largest-year-over-year-drop-in-for-sale-inventory-since-2013-300571056.html

SOURCE Trulia

Share to Youtube Share to Facebook Facebook Share to Linkedin Share to Twitter Twitter Share to Tiktok