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Boston is the nation’s hottest housing market

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Although the Greater Boston area may still be plagued by persistently chilly temperatures, its housing market is still red-hot. According to data from Altos Research, the Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH metropolitan area was the hottest housing market nationwide as of Feb. 23, 2024.

The metro area, which comprises Southern New Hampshire and the North Shore region of Massachusetts, had an Altos Market Action Index score of 60.59 in late February, over a full point higher than the second-place finisher the San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA metro area. Altos considers anything over 30 to be a seller’s market.

Local agents attribute at least some of the market’s hotness to the inventory situation.

“It’s bad, like really bad,” Doug Danzey, the leader of the eXp Realty brokered teamerage The Cobalt Group, said. “We are back to seeing people paying over asking, waiving home inspections and doing whatever they need to do to purchase a property.”

As of Feb. 16, 2024, the metro area had 1,753 active single-family listings. During the same week in 2020, just prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, there were 4,537 active single-family listings in the area.

Additionally, the entire state of New Hampshire had just 985 active single-family listings as of mid-February, compared to 3,872 listings just prior to the pandemic, according to Altos.

“There is a significant lack of inventory, to the point where there are so many more buyer that are desperately trying to find a home, than there are options out there for them to even potentially find anything,” Nicole Howley, a Bedford, NH-based Coldwell Banker Realty agent, said. “It is an extremely challenging real estate market right now.”

According to Chip Stella, the director of brokerage at New England based LandVest, interest rates are to blame for the lack of inventory.

“I think the big driver of the lack of mobility and inventory in today’s market is the interest rates,” Stella said. “We’ve got this total rate-lock event.”

In recent months, however, as mortgage rates have stabilized and even come down slightly, agents like Danzey say more buyers have come to the market, adding even more pressure to the already strained inventory situation.

“When we saw rates start to come back down into the 7% range and then below 7%, it instilled some confidence in buyers to get back out there,” Danzey said. “I think the consumer confidence, overall is starting to come back and the people that can afford to are back out there looking at properties and making offers.”

Although rates may be keeping some sellers in their homes longer than they wanted, Stella said he is not seeing as great an impact on buyers as he is sellers.

“People need to buy houses, where the interest rate is 5% or 7%, they are still buying,” Stella said. “We are seeing a lot of life events — birth, marriage, divorce — and that is really what is driving the market.”

While agents say there is no doubt that the market is hot, it is certainly cooler than the height of the pandemic housing market.

“That was like a whirlwind,” Howley said of the pandemic market. “Lately I haven’t seen as many appraisal gaps, but there are still plenty of multiple offer situations.”

Despite frequently finding themselves facing multiple offers and low inventory, Howley said buyers are appearing to be pretty resi..

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