A history of July sales as a percentage of inventory
What you see here is a running percentage of July sales as part of inventory from 1996 to 2022. Jonathan Easley and I were.
just an agent, running the numbers – Rob Thompson, RealtorĀ®, Iconic Colorado Properties, LLC
What you see here is a running percentage of July sales as part of inventory from 1996 to 2022. Jonathan Easley and I were.
Here are the last 26 years of August(es) number of sales. At the current rate of sales, I think we will probably close at.
This is an update to my previous chart showing the M2 money supply and the median pricing in Colorado Springs. The R2 on this.
What you see here is a correlation matrix. This chart shows the correlation coefficient between variables. I.e., it shows the relationship between the listed.
Data is awesome. Here are the weekly closed and original list prices over the last three years. Here I have included the list price.
The market is cooling a bit. Inventory is up and the closed to list price ratio (a measure of how much above or below.
As we close out June 2022, nine of the top 20 subareas have more active listings than under contract, a distinct shift from 4-6.
As we move into the end of the month, here’s where we stand right now. Average pricing is down about $7K from one month.
Here is a quick snapshot of the top 20 subareas in the PPAR region, mapped in descending order by their number of sales in.
I saw this morning someone post a generalized chart stating that real estate beats inflation. Let’s take a look at this locally. Below is.