Daryl Fairweather of Redfin and Jeff Tucker of Zillow said the market would still continue to be strong through the end of 2021.
Source: Inman News
Summer market will be hot, but not scorching, economists say at Inman Connect
More from AgentMore posts in Agent »
- What real estate agents can learn from TikTok, Tylenol and Disney
- Former agent convicted of swindling woman out of her home
- The modern tech stack agents and brokerages need now: Streaming
- $1B Florida brokerage and former NFL prospect join Christie’s International Real Estate
- Here’s the essential reading on the Compass-Anywhere deal
More from bidding warsMore posts in bidding wars »
More from COVID-19 buying trendsMore posts in COVID-19 buying trends »
- Tom Cruise lists his adventure-primed Telluride estate for $39.5M
- Bigger is better: Square footage is the No. 1 amenity for luxury buyers
- NYC’s hottest pandemic investment properties? Condominiums in bulk
- The good, bad and ugly of owning a historic home amid the pandemic
- Winter is coming: These are most in-demand cold weather amenities
More from Daryl FairweatherMore posts in Daryl Fairweather »
- No, the Washington DC housing market isn’t crashing amid layoffs
- Renters feel less connected to their neighbors than homeowners
- Commissions held steady after Aug. 17, Redfin study shows
- Florida’s biggest insurer hands off 600k policies as new storm comes
- More and more homes are languishing on the market
More from home officeMore posts in home office »
- 7 ways remote work has shaped homebuyer preferences
- Millennial art buyers, ‘toe dipping’ and the return of staycations: 8 summer trends you need to know
- Is it a write-off? See which of these 14 expenses agents can deduct at tax time
- The best 2021 Black Friday deals for every type of real estate agent
- Home office eclipses short commute as a buyer must-have, agents say
More from home pricesMore posts in home prices »
- Is fall the new spring? Market winds may be shifting, NAR says
- Should they stay or go (down) now? Forecasters are split on where mortgage rates will be in 2026
- How the growing buyer power shift is reshaping the real estate market
- Lenders getting a jump on higher 2026 conforming loan limits
- These are the states where homeowners will benefit most — and least — from new SALT cap
More from home supplyMore posts in home supply »
More from inflationMore posts in inflation »
- Should they stay or go (down) now? Forecasters are split on where mortgage rates will be in 2026
- Why is the Fed cutting interest rates — and what happens next?
- Homeowners rush to refinance as mortgage rates hit 2025 low
- Rising inflation makes ‘jumbo’ Fed rate cut unlikely next week
- Homebuyer demand surges as mortgage rates tumble to 2025 low
More from inman connectMore posts in inman connect »
- In an uncertain market, Inman Connect New York offers solutions
- Take the Inman Intel Index survey for September 2025
- Drunken gunman, new legal filing, Roseanne Barr: Inman’s Top 5
- Trump vs. Fed, Taylor Swift, your referral blueprint: Inman’s Top 5
- Brad Inman: ‘AI will be god-like,’ and other real estate predictions
More from inman eventsMore posts in inman events »
More from Jeff TuckerMore posts in Jeff Tucker »
- Why is the Fed cutting interest rates — and what happens next?
- ‘If our nurses, firefighters, and teachers can’t live here, then our community stops functioning’
- ICYMI, all the latest on Trump, the Fed, mortgage rates and more
- Dems seek answers on impact of Fannie, Freddie IPO on rates
- Why is Midwest real estate beating the rest of the country?
More from Katie KossevMore posts in Katie Kossev »
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
More from mortgage ratesMore posts in mortgage rates »
- Democrats seek transparency into Fannie, Freddie ‘reprivatization’
- Is fall the new spring? Market winds may be shifting, NAR says
- How a government shutdown would affect real estate agents
- August existing-home sales may have been lowest in a decade
- New-home sales spiked in August to highest rate since 2022
More from RedfinMore posts in Redfin »
- Here’s what comes next in the Compass-Anywhere deal
- Compass to acquire Anywhere in $1.6B deal, capping rise to top
- How the growing buyer power shift is reshaping the real estate market
- These are the states where homeowners will benefit most — and least — from new SALT cap
- Compass calling foul on MLS rules is hypocrisy
More from Redfin chief economistMore posts in Redfin chief economist »
More from sales volumeMore posts in sales volume »
More from second home marketsMore posts in second home markets »
- Vacation home demand near 7-year low due to costs, employer policies
- Sotheby’s snags leading South-Central Texas team to form affiliate
- Turks and Caicos latest affiliate to join The Corcoran Group
- Sotheby’s notches $204B in global sales volume in 2021
- Juniper Holiday & Home expands luxe rentals to more vacation spots
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- What real estate agents can learn from TikTok, Tylenol and Disney
- Democrats seek transparency into Fannie, Freddie ‘reprivatization’
- Former agent convicted of swindling woman out of her home
- Is fall the new spring? Market winds may be shifting, NAR says
- I’ve studied real estate marketing for 31 years. Here are 7 essentials for effective marketing campaigns
More from ZillowMore posts in Zillow »
- Where the industry stands on the Compass-Anywhere deal: Top 5
- How the Compass-Anywhere deal could spur an ‘arms race’
- Does the Compass-Anywhere deal set the stage for a private listings culture clash?
- Experts see Anywhere acquisition as bid to remake real estate in Compass’ image
- Compass agents see play for Anywhere as a power move
Be First to Comment