Existing home sales hit 9-month high with inventory at 1.43M units

HousingWire

November inventory is up 7.5% year over year, as prices rise for 29th straight month

By Logan Mohtashami

Existing home sales have been trending higher since June, when the monthly sales print bottomed at 3,930,000 for 2025. The question is: can this continue?

Back in mid-June, the housing market started to shift, and then mortgage rates fell below the key 6.64% level and headed toward 6. This has given us 200,000 more sales growth since June, and the key variables that led that growth are still in play today. 

Let’s look at the NAR report for November and see what clues we can get today.

From NAR: “Existing-home sales increased for the third straight month due to lower mortgage rates this autumn,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. “However, inventory growth is beginning to stall.”

My central theme for existing home sales has always been that the bar is so low that we can trip over it. Meaning it doesn’t take much to grow sales here, but it typically happens when mortgage rates head lower, and especially when mortgage rates head toward 6%. 2025 sales data looks normal to me with that mindset. In fact, purchase application data has had its best 20 weeks of the year recently, and this data looks out 30-90 days.

View Interactive Graph

Below is a historical look at existing home sales going back decades. No matter how high rates, taxes, prices and insurance go, we haven’t been seeing a crash in home sales since the end of 2022, but we’ve been building a low base of sales to work from.

View Interactive Graph

NAR Inventory in November:

  • 1.43 million units: Total housing inventory, down 5.9% from October and up 7.5% from November 2024 (1.33 million).
  • 4.2-month supply of unsold inventory, down from 4.4 months in October and up from 3.8 months in November 2024.

View Interactive Graph

We have heard a lot of people talk recently about how housing is worse now than in 2008, but I am assuming these people were just children during that time. Home prices fell 12% in 2008, which was the most significant national price crash post World War II and we had massive distressed sellers during that period. Just take a look at the bankruptcy and foreclosure data back then:

View Interactive Graph

NAR Total active inventory:

  • In 2007: 4 million
  • Currently: 1.43 million

NAR Months of supply:

  • In 2008: over 10 months
  • Currently: 4.2 months

It’s tough for me to take people seriously who talk about “worse than 2008” when the data above was readily available for anyone to read.

NAR Median sales price in November:

  • $409,200: Median existing-home price for all housing types, up 1.2% from one year ago ($404,400)
  • This is the 29th consecutive month of year-over-year price increases.

One of the things I got wrong in 2025 was assuming we would have some negative year-over-year pricing data in October-December, as year-over-year comps were tough. Last year, home prices firmed up in the second half of the year, and with higher inventory this year, I assumed we would have seen some slight negative year-over-year data by now, but that hasn’t happened. We have one more month left for 2025.

Conclusion

These existing home sales look about right to me; sales rising from the lows of June make sense with our Housing Market Tracker data and where mortgage rates have been trending. Earlier in the year, year-over-year sales comps were very easy. If sales data were just trending at 4 million from June to October, we would see growth. Now, the comps are a bit harder and we saw a 1% decline year over year. Still, sales are at a nine-month high and have been trending up since the lows in June.

Logan Mohtashami is a renowned expert in the mortgage and housing ecosystem, recognized for his insightful analysis and commentary on the U.S. economy and real estate market. Mohtashami is a lead analyst for HousingWire and is a regular contributor on the HousingWire Daily podcast. With a background spanning over two decades in the mortgage industry, Mohtashami — nicknamed “Chart Daddy” — has the remarkable ability to decipher complex economic data and translate it into understandable, actionable insights. This knowledge has made Mohtashami a sought-after commentator and his expertise has been featured extensively in news outlets, including CNBC, where he is a frequent guest.

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