The Denver MLS trends data for May 2020 is out. Comparing year over year (May 2019 to May 2020) is better than comparing the previous month, because we have defined seasonality trends.
As the entire month of April fell in Colorado’s statewide Stay-at-Home order, no surprise that showings took a plunge. But as soon as restrictions lifted in May, showing activity jumped up to normal levels for this time of year!
Denver MLS Market Stats – First Week of May
Here is the RE trends info for the first week of May 2020 vs same week 2019. HUGE rebound! Better than expected.
UNDER $300K
- Showings are back to last year’s rates
- New listings doubled from last few weeks; plenty of homes to look at
- UC count more than doubled; getting close to last year’s run rate!
- Closings still depressed and will be for 2-4 weeks while all of these newly UC deals work their way through
- Withdrawn listing count below last year
- Every indicator consistent with recovery as we expected, just stronger than I had hoped.
$300-$500K
- Showings are ABOVE last year’s rates
- New listings up 2.5x from last few weeks; plenty of homes to look at
- UC count more than doubled; getting close to last year’s run rate!
- Closings went up some; but will be low for 2-4 weeks while all of these newly UC deals work their way through
- Withdrawn listing count below last year
- Every indicator consistent with recovery as we expected, just stronger than I had hoped.
$500-$900K
- Showings are ABOVE last year’s rates; tripled overnight.
- New listings tripled from last few weeks; plenty of homes to look at
- UC count more than doubled; getting close to last year’s run rate!
- Closings still depressed and will be for 2-4 weeks while all of these newly UC deals work their way through
- Withdrawn listing count below last year
- Every indicator consistent with recovery as we expected, just stronger than I had hoped.
$900K+ luxury
- Showings up 70% from anemic performance for a month; still below last year but improving
- New listings about tripled from last few weeks; LOTS of homes to look at
- UC count more than doubled; still below last year’s run rate though
- Closings still depressed and will be a while before recovering, I think
- Withdrawn listing count ABOVE last year (all other price segments were below)
Denver MLS Market Stats – Last Three Weeks of May
The beginning of March 2020 had incredibly active showings. April took the expected plunge due to the State’s stay‐at‐home order. The first half of May aligned with last year’s activity, while the last few weeks have surpassed 2019. Just an illustration of the pent‐up demand.
Showing traffic continues to rise (Denver and Douglas County opened for showings, other counties did not). Overall, we are back to 2019 levels. Newly added listings is similar.
The number UC has rebounded rapidly to match last year’s performance. The number closed should lag 3‐5 weeks behind the big uptick in UC. Since we have two strong weeks of UC performance, the rebound in closed sales should start in the last week of May.
Withdrawn count is significantly higher than 2019. From the seller point of view, this is good for the remaining listings, since there is less inventory to compete with.
UNDER $300K
- Showing traffic continues to rise (Denver and Douglas County opened for showings, other counties did not).
- UC lag showings by 2‐6 weeks… so one week’s of improved showings hasn’t impacts UC count yet. Number closed will lag UC by an additional 3‐6 weeks, so recovery there will be in late May to early June.
- Withdrawn count is significantly higher than 2019. From the seller point of view, this is good for the remaining listings.
$300‐$500K
- Showing traffic continues to rise (Denver and Douglas County opened for showings, other counties did not).
- UC lag showings by 2‐6 weeks… so one week’s of improved showings hasn’t impacts UC count yet. Number closed will lag UC by an additional 3‐6 weeks, so recovery there will be in late May to early June.
- Withdrawn count is significantly higher than 2019. From the seller point of view, this is good for the remaining listings.
$500‐$900K
- Showing traffic continues to rise (Denver and Douglas County opened for showings, other counties did not).
- UC lag showings by 2‐6 weeks… so one week’s of improved showings hasn’t impacts UC count yet. Number closed will lag UC by an additional 3‐6 weeks, so recovery there will be in late May to early June.
- Withdrawn count is significantly higher than 2019. From the seller point of view, this is good for the remaining listings.
$900K+ luxury
- Showing traffic continues to rise (Denver and Douglas County opened for showings, other counties did not).
- UC lag showings by 2‐6 weeks… so one week’s of improved showings hasn’t impacts UC count yet. Number closed will lag UC by an additional 3‐6 weeks, so recovery there will be in late May to early June.
- Withdrawn count is significantly higher than 2019. From the seller point of view, this is good for the remaining listings.
Source: The above executive summary is from Lon Welsh of Your Castle Real Estate.
Denver Housing Trends May 2020



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Video: Denver Real Estate Trends – May 2020
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 24:44 — 28.3MB)
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