Zillow Research

Home Sales Defy Expectations and Decrease in May

With homes purchased under the homebuyer tax credits still closing throughout May, economists across the country predicted increased home sales during the month. So today’s news from the National Association of Realtors that existing-home sales fell 2.2 percent from April to May came as a surprise to many.

Existing-home sales fell to an annual rate of 5.66 million in May, down from an annual rate of 6.06 million in April, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Here at Zillow, we had expected sales to remain relatively robust until the homebuyer tax credit’s deadline to close on June 30. While the market has hit a bottom in sales – despite the monthly decline, existing-home sales were up 19.2 percent from a year earlier – it has not yet hit a bottom in home values, according to Zillow’s Real Estate Market Reports. Today’s news make it clear the housing market continues to run into hurdles.

About the author

Ian Port is the director of content at Zillow, leading development of a wide range of real estate content for more than eight years. He began his career covering housing, real estate and urban affairs at local newspapers in California. A former music journalist and magazine writer, Ian’s work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, Village Voice, and many other places. Ian is also the author of The Birth of Loud (Scribner, 2019), a critically acclaimed dual biography of Leo Fender and Les Paul.
Exit mobile version