Anonymous wrote:I see houses sitting in 22207 thought, too. Although that said I've seen some on busy roads sell recently, so who knows.
I don't think it's shifting back to a buyer's market. But I do think there may be more balance now.
Anonymous wrote:Still selling well in 20878
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this about the time of the year where things start slowing down a bit anyway? Certainly by the end of the month. All the people ready to buy this year jumped when the spring market started. The people left aren't as committed.
Anonymous wrote:Realtor here. The market starting slowing in the last couple of weeks. As it always does the day school lets out. There will be some pickup in late July with listings for school-sensitive shoppers who want to settle before Labor Day.
This happens every year. Nothing seems abnormal this summer, other than the spring was incredibly active with a lot of pent up demand. I still hear about pent up buyer demand but inventory is thin for quality product.
Anonymous wrote:Ashburn but not the good places close in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still selling well in 20878
Where? Things are sitting for a while in my 20878 neighborhood. Seen many price drops recently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This article doesn't make sense. The things that caused uncertainty and fear this past winter have disappeared.
exactly that's the point. so the market should've recovered because of these things disappearing but the author is stating that it didn't.
How can you say the market and reference the entire USA.
Things inside the beltway and in DC are still hot.
Anonymous wrote:Still selling well in 20878
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This article doesn't make sense. The things that caused uncertainty and fear this past winter have disappeared.
exactly that's the point. so the market should've recovered because of these things disappearing but the author is stating that it didn't.
How can you say the market and reference the entire USA.
Things inside the beltway and in DC are still hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This article doesn't make sense. The things that caused uncertainty and fear this past winter have disappeared.
exactly that's the point. so the market should've recovered because of these things disappearing but the author is stating that it didn't.
How can you say the market and reference the entire USA.
Things inside the beltway and in DC are still hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This article doesn't make sense. The things that caused uncertainty and fear this past winter have disappeared.
exactly that's the point. so the market should've recovered because of these things disappearing but the author is stating that it didn't.