The News-Times

Real estate listings may signal tipping point for state’s homebuyers

- By Alexander Soule Alex.Soule@scni.com; @casoulman

After two-thirds of New Haven County cities and towns generated sufficient numbers of new home listings to replace those sold in the third quarter, the market remained balanced into December, signaling a break in the high prices that have thwarted many Connecticu­t buyers during the pandemic real estate market.

William Pitt Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty noted a slight increase in November for new listings of singlefami­ly homes in New Haven County compared to November 2021 in an analysis of select markets in Connecticu­t.

New Haven County also stood out in a third-quarter report of real estate markets statewide by Berkshire Hathaway HomeServic­es New England Properties, with new listings easily outstrippi­ng sales. By comparison, just six Fairfield County markets had higher numbers of new listings than sales in the third quarter, though Stamford and Greenwich were in the group as two key markets.

Statewide about 3,150 houses and condominiu­ms sold in November, down 24 percent from a year ago. For the third quarter, the decline was 19 percent statewide.

Any sustained stretch of increasing inventory should help ease prices for buyers, giving them options if the house of their choosing is priced too high, and so forcing sellers to cut their

prices. Many sellers have been doing just that in the last half of 2022, as rising mortgage rates have cut into the prices home buyers can afford.

Buyers continued to pay

slightly above asking prices on average in November, as calculated by Berkshire Hathaway, but not at the level they were in the third quarter, and with some of those homeowners having

listed their properties again at lower prices to draw more buyers to open houses.

Over the first 11 months of 2022, the average sale price in Connecticu­t was $9,500 higher than the average listing price for a 1.8 percent premium for buyers. But in November alone, that average sale and listing price gap was down to $400, and the median home sold in Connecticu­t went for roughly the same as the median listing, at $340,000.

Just over 400 more homes were sold in November compared to the number of listings hitting the market, an expected trend as some buyers and sellers put real estate on hold for the holidays. But in New Haven County, the differenti­al was far tighter, with only 10 more homes sold than the 506 new listings to hit the market.

Berkshire Hathaway releases sales and listing data at the municipal level quarterly. In the third quarter, cities and towns that saw more new listings than sales included New Haven, Waterbury, Branford, East Haven, Guilford, Hamden, Madison, Meriden, Milford, Naugatuck, Southbury and West Haven. In the group of locales with at least 100 listings during the quarter, only Cheshire and Wallingfor­d saw more transactio­ns close than new listings that hit the market.

 ?? Alexander Soule / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? A Birch Hill Road house in Newtown listed for sale in November. Statewide in Connecticu­t, home sales topped new listings in November, but those landing buyers were still getting above asking prices on average.
Alexander Soule / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo A Birch Hill Road house in Newtown listed for sale in November. Statewide in Connecticu­t, home sales topped new listings in November, but those landing buyers were still getting above asking prices on average.

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