Utah's housing supply is flagging again after a post-pandemic surge

The housing supply in the Salt Lake metro area has fallen again after a couple of brief post-pandemic spikes.

The housing supply in the Salt Lake metro area has fallen again after a couple of brief post-pandemic spikes.

Why it matters: The housing market is considered balanced when supply meets the six-month level — and Utah's housing markets don't come close to that.

Zoom out: Nationally, that hasn't happened since 2012.

  • "The market is fundamentally unbalanced," because the U.S. is short an estimated 3.8 million homes, Redfin chief economist Daryl Fairweather tells Axios.

Between the lines: Housing supply drives affordability.

What's next: If mortgage rates fall, demand will surge, and supply will continue to deplete, Fairweather says. (Read Full Article Here)

Previous
Previous

Is the American dream fading? Gov. Cox warns of dire consequences without housing reform

Next
Next

Speaking with economist Robert Spendlove about the Utah housing market