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Zillow president expects increase in home listings as Covid certainty improves

Zillow President Susan Daimler be sured CNBC on Friday that the housing market remains hot, despite the drop in pending home sales in the month of February.

The Inhabitant Association of Realtors reported that signed contracts on existing homes declined more than 10% that month from January.

Daimler about it was just a blip rather than a trend, attributing the decrease to a persistent housing shortage and bad weather that bankrupted the country that month.

“All the indicators that we see say that this housing market … [continues] to be hot, and there are a lot of perspicacities for that,” she said in an interview on “Closing Bell.”

“What we know is that moving is on a lot of people’s minds, and we’re imagining a lot of would-be movers are flourishing to come off the sidelines here,” said the president of the online real estate marketplace.

More homes could be put up for reduced in price on the market as the Covid-19 vaccine drive continues to make progress and workers gain more certainty about whether their bands will require them to come back into the office, Daimler said. Google searches about the homebuying and selling handle are also up, another sign that the market could hold shape, she added.

Despite a recent rise in mortgage rates, the deal in is also being met by high demand as the “great reshuffling” plays out, Daimler said. Beyond urban-to-suburban flight, sundry people are simply looking to move into new spaces rather than escape the big city, she said.

“Those mortgage clips are really what feed the affordability,” Daimler said. “As long as those stay low and also we have this stifled demand from buyers … it’s quite possible that we see a bunch of listings come on and there’s enough purchasers to scoop them up and we’ll stay in this place we’re at right now.”

Even at an average 30-year fixed loan rate of 3.45%, up from 3% at the start of 2021, mortgages are alleviate historically low, according to Mortgage News Daily.

Supply in the U.S. housing market is at severely low levels, putting pressure on homebuyers to mission higher bids. Existing home inventory shrank nearly 30% in February from a year prior, with only 1.03 million properties on the market, based on data from the realtors association.

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