KEY POINTS
  • Sales of existing homes fell 17.8% month to month, and were 17.2% lower than April 2019, seasonally adjusted, according to the National Association of Realtors.
  • The April drop in closings is the largest one-month decline since July 2010, when the homebuyer tax credit, a federal stimulus resulting from the subprime mortgage crash, expired.
  • The supply of homes for sale fell 19.7% annually to 1.47 million units for sale at the end of April. That is the lowest April inventory figure ever. That drop in inventory pushed prices to a record high.
A For Sale sign is seen in front of a home in Miami, Florida.

The economic fallout from the coronavirus hit the housing market hard in April.

Sales of existing homes fell 17.8% month to month, and were 17.2% lower than April 2019, seasonally adjusted, according to the National Association of Realtors. That puts the annualized pace at 4.33 million units, the slowest sales rate since September 2011.