The total homes listed for sale continue to move downward.  The latest 
decline in October to 3.33 million was partly seasonal, as autumn and 
winter months nearly always have fewer listings in comparison with 
spring and summer months.  Still, examining listings only in the month 
of October (so as to get an apple-to-apple comparison), this year saw 
the lowest inventory since 2005.
 
 
Click HERE to enlarge picture. 
A review of June, July, August, and September data also says the same
 thing: namely, 2011 had the lowest inventory count since 2005 across 
same-month comparisons.  The market is clearly healing and the falling 
inventory is an early indicator as to what will happen to home prices in
 the future.
Despite the improving inventory trend, let’s be mindful that the 
current inventory conditions are still considered elevated and above 
normal compared to the early years of the last decade.  Also the 
months-supply – i.e., how many months it would take to exhaust the 
current inventory assuming the current sales pace – stood at 8 months in
 October, which is still a tad above normal conditions.  Ideally, the 
months-supply figure needs to fall to about 6 months before prices show 
consistent positive movement of about 3 to 5 percent annually.
Separately, the inventory of newly constructed homes (not existing 
home inventory) is at 40 year lows because homebuilders have just not 
been able to break ground and build new homes because of very difficult 
lending conditions in obtaining construction loans.
The inventory trends for both existing and new homes should therefore
 provide some reassurance that home price growth (at the national level)
 could be just around the corner.  Local markets in Bismarck, Buffalo, 
Pittsburgh, San Diego, and Washington, D.C., as some examples, have 
already shown consistent price gains.
 
 
 
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