Bidding wars have broken out in hot real-estate markets like Denver and Los Angeles, where there aren’t enough houses to meet demand. The lack of supply is a key reason home sales nationwide have yet to return to healthy levels following the housing collapse in 2008.
“Inventory is still fairly low in a lot of markets across the country,” said Skylar Olsen, senior economist at real estate data firm Zillow. “Buyers are not going to have the easiest time out there.”
Further tilting the market in favor of sellers are low mortgage rates, which have ratcheted up pressure on buyers to wrap up deals before borrowing becomes more expensive.
Then there’s the matter of price. While the overall rise in home prices has slowed this year, fierce competition in many cities and markets will make the cost of buying much harder this spring. Prices are peaking or coming close in roughly half the country. Seven states set highs in March, including Colorado, New York, Tennessee and Texas, according to real estate data provider CoreLogic.
Homebuyers this spring will need to pay attention to six major factors – check them out at Business Insider.
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