Monday, August 01, 2022

Housing Inventory August 1st Update: Up 32.3% Year-over-year

Inventory is still increasing rapidly, but the inventory build has slowed somewhat over the last few weeks.    Still, inventory is increasing much faster than normal for this time of year (both in percentage terms and in total inventory added).  Here are the same week inventory changes for the last four years:

2022: 13.4K
2021: 4.4K
2020: -13.4K
2019: 2.9K

Inventory bottomed seasonally at the beginning of March 2022 and is now up 124% since then.  More than double!  Altos reports inventory is up 32.3% year-over-year and is now 23.2% above the peak last year.

Altos Home Inventory Click on graph for larger image.

This inventory graph is courtesy of Altos Research.

As of July 29th, inventory was at 539 thousand (7-day average), compared to 526 thousand the prior week.  Inventory was up 2.5% from the previous week. 

Inventory is still historically low. Compared to the same week in 2021, inventory is up 32.3% from 407 thousand, however compared to the same week in 2020 inventory is down 14.0% from 627 thousand.  Compared to 3 years ago, inventory is down 44.6% from 972 thousand.

Here are the inventory milestones I’m watching for with the Altos data:

1. The seasonal bottom (happened on March 4th for Altos) ✅

2. Inventory up year-over-year (happened on May 13th for Altos) ✅

3. Inventory up compared to two years ago (currently down 14.0% according to Altos)

4. Inventory up compared to 2019 (currently down 44.6%).

Altos Home Inventory
Here is a graph of the inventory change vs 2021, 2020 (milestone 3 above) and 2019 (milestone 4).

The blue line is the year-over-year data, the red line is compared to two years ago, and dashed purple is compared to 2019.

Two years ago (in 2020) inventory was declining all year, so the two-year comparison will get easier all year.  

Based on the recent increases in inventory, my current estimate is inventory will be up compared to 2020 in late August or early September of this year, and back to 2019 levels in early 2023.

Mike Simonsen discusses this data regularly on Youtube.

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