The Denver Post

FEWER HOME SALES SEEN

Realtor.com: 6.7 percent drop in purchases, 6.8 percent rise in cost

- By Aldo Svaldi

Realtor.com is predicting metro Denver home sales could slow significan­tly next year, but that decrease won’t derail home price gains as existing homeowners buy up higher-value properties.

A forecast from Realtor.com, one of the country’s largest real estate listing portals, predicts metro Denver home sales could slow significan­tly next year, but that the decline in activity won’t derail home price gains as existing homeowners buy up higher-value properties.

“Despite the anticipate­d slowdown in sales, the Denver housing market remains on solid footing,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist with Realtor.com. “Repeat buyers are likely to drive up the median price of homes in Denver as the mix shifts away from entry-level purchases.”

Realtor.com is calling for a 6.7 percent decline in home sales in metro Denver next year, coming on the heels of a 3 percent gain this year. Despite fewer homes being sold, Hale predicts the median price of a home sold in Denver next year will rise 6.8 percent.

Hale notes that households under the age of 34, the prime market for entry-level properties, is on the decline in metro Denver, while households comprised of moveup buyers ages 35 to 44 and 45 to 54 is expected to grow 5.2 percent and 7.2 percent respective­ly.

More buyers in the “move-up” category, who have built up equity after years of strong gains, will remain active, while more entry-level buyers will get sidelined because of higher borrowing costs. That is what will allow home prices to rise as sales slow.

A year ago, Realtor.com called for metro Denver home sales to rise 1.8 percent and the median sales price to rise 6.5 percent. It undershot the mark, with anticipate­d sales gains of 3 percent and an expected 9.2 percent gain in the median price of a home sold in 2018.

There are current signs of a housing slowdown, both locally and nationally, as buyers cope with higher lending costs. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index, out on Tuesday, slowed to a 5.5 percent annual pace in September,

down from a 5.7 percent pace in August. Annualizin­g the index gains of the last few months, appreciati­on is now running closer to 2 percent.

“On the supply side, slow but steady growth in inventory is providing relief to homebuyers. On the demand side, years of price growth outpacing income growth, as well as rising mortgage rates, is making the cost of buying homes increasing­ly expensive,” notes Ralph B. McLaughlin, deputy chief economist at CoreLogic, in comments on the CaseShille­r report.

The index for metro Denver, while still running above the national average, is also coming down. It gained 7.3 percent annually in September, down from a 7.7 percent pace in August and an 8.6 percent pace in March and April.

Metro Denver continues to report some of the strongest home price gains of the 20 cities in the survey, with only Las Vegas, San Francisco and Seattle ahead of it. But Seattle offers a warning of how quickly a market can cool. For years it led major metros with double-digit home price gains, but annual appreciati­on there has slowed sharply, from 11.5 percent in July to 8.4 percent in September.

“Home sales numbers indicate that home seekers are now less willing to jump into the fray of finding a home when inventory remains low and competitio­n stiff. With rates set to rise through 2019, expect home prices to continue to moderate,” said Cheryl Young, a senior economist at Trulia.

 ?? Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file ?? Workmen build a house in the Beeler Park neighborho­od of Stapleton in August. A forecast from Realtor.com is predicting that home sales will slow by nearly 7 percent in the Denver area in 2019.
Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file Workmen build a house in the Beeler Park neighborho­od of Stapleton in August. A forecast from Realtor.com is predicting that home sales will slow by nearly 7 percent in the Denver area in 2019.
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