April Existing Home Sales: It Was Always Going to be Bad
April existing home sales fell 17.8% from March to 4.33 million, according to the National Association of Realtors, the largest monthly decline since 2010.

April existing home sales fell 17.8% from March to 4.33 million, according to the National Association of Realtors, the largest monthly decline since 2010.
It was always going to be bad. While sales of existing homes took a significant step back in March, April’s report is the first one to truly capture the change in buyer activity since the coronavirus broke out on U.S. soil. The combination of fear, economic uncertainty and mandatory stay-at-home orders brought huge portions of the economy to a crashing halt and prevented many home shoppers and sellers from participating in the market. The question now is what happens from here. April’s report was bad, but it could have been worse — price growth remains strong and inventory is very low, keeping competition high for those buyers still on the market. May’s report certainly won’t be a blockbuster, but it’s clear that as the country begins to slowly reopen, buyer demand for homes remains sturdy and many are eager to take advantage of record low interest rates to get in on the action. It appears the worst may now be behind us and that home sales are at least at the start of the road to recovery.