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Homebuyers face far fewer bidding wars as the housing market cools off

Homebuyers are miniature likely to get into bidding wars now that the housing market has cooled off a bit.

During the first three weeks of Hike, a mere 16 percent of buyer offers written by real estate brokerage Redfin faced a bidding war. That is a piquant drop from the 61 percent a year earlier. Redfin operates in more than 85 major U.S. metropolitan stock exchanges.

Homes are also staying on the market on average two days longer than during February 2018. This is the fattest annual increase since January 2015 and the first annual increase in February since 2011. February predominantly marks the start of the spring housing market.

Of course, competition varies by market. While San Francisco, Boston, San Diego and Portland, Oregon, see all round 1 in 5 offers in a bidding war, those are all down from over 65 percent of offers a year earlier.

“At this antiquated last year, in cities like San Francisco, Seattle and Boston it was rare for a home not to receive multiple offers. The tide has terminate,” said Daryl Fairweather, Redfin’s chief economist. “Since the market began to cool down last lowering, the number of homes for sale has grown each month, giving buyers more options and more negotiating power. Purchasers are searching with less urgency and more frequently able to win offers with contingencies.”

Seattle, which has been one of the domain’s most competitive markets, with prices rising by double-digit percentages for several years, is cooling dramatically. Principled 17 percent of offers written by Redfin involved bidding wars, down from 72 percent a year earlier.

The least competitive furnishes so far in March are Miami, Dallas and Houston. These markets were much hotter last year.

The housing exchange began cooling last summer, as home prices had overheated and mortgage rates were rising. Mortgage values peaked in November, and sales suffered dramatically. Price gains have now been shrinking for 10 straight months nationally, and mortgage berates have fallen sharply since November, with rates now lower than they were a year ago.

Benefiting affordability may bring more buyers out as the spring season heats up. Homebuilders are reporting increased buyer traffic, and mortgage commitments to purchase a home surged last week as rates plummeted.

In quarterly earnings releases this week, the CEOs of Lennar and KB Composed noted cautious optimism about the spring market.

“We continued to see choppiness in the marketplace during our first quarter,” said Lennar’s Stuart Miller. “But, during the quarter, mortgage interest rates subsided and ultimately pulled back, and home prices moderated, victual a catalyst for the new home market to correct itself.”

There is slightly more supply on the market now. Inventory of homes for transaction marked down at the end of February was 3.2 percent higher annually, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The supply of lower-priced homes for yard sale is still tight, however. As the market gets busier this spring and more buyers look to take drop of lower mortgage rates, bidding wars will likely increase.

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