Housing: ‘We’re going to go through a painful, volatile period,’ Redfin CEO says

In This Article:

Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the housing market, home price volatility, mortgage rates, inventory, and home builder sentiment.

Video Transcript

BRAD SMITH: White hot, then ice cold. The housing market has had a volatile year, to say the least. Now as houses sit unsold on a cooling market, there may be early signs that people are willing to start buying again. For more on this, we're joined by Redfin CEO, Glenn Kelman. Glenn, great to have you here with us. And thanks for taking the time here.

First and foremost, I mean, the company had just reported earnings as well. Give us a glimpse into where the market share and the anticipation to really build out the number of listings that Redfin has, where you've been moving that forward. As of right now, it sits at about 8/10 of a percent of US existing home sales units in the second quarter of 2022.

GLENN KELMAN: Well, that just means we have more room to grow, doesn't it? So market share gains accelerated in the second quarter. It's probably one reason that Redfin traded up. We obviously want to keep taking share that was highlighted by strength in our listings business. We list homes for 1%. We sell them for more money. The advertising campaign behind that has been really successful. So it's been a tough market. But Redfin keeps taking share, and we keep serving customers well, so I think we'll be fine.

JULIE HYMAN: Of course, on the other hand, the pie's getting smaller, right, Glenn, even if you're taking a larger slice of it. Something else you guys talked about this morning is that the number of homes in July that sat on the market for at least 30 days without going under contract was up 12 and 1/2%.

And we were talking earlier about the really rapid change that we have seen in demand for a number of different products, from retailers to semiconductor makers. And that seems to be happening in the housing market as well. Can you talk us through sort of the pace of the slowdown that we are seeing right now?

GLENN KELMAN: Well, it was really dramatic in May and June. I think it was underreported in the press. Housing used to be a very stable asset class. And now it's extremely volatile. And one reason for that is that it used to be that institutions accounted for about a quarter of the sales. But now it's about 1/3. You have more builder activity. You have iBuyers. You have real estate investment trusts, all active in the single family home market.

And they react much more quickly to changing economic conditions. If you've lived in a house for 30 years and raised your kids there, there's no way you're going to mark it down after two weeks on the market. But an iBuyer is going to price ahead of the market and mark it down every week until it sells. And so that just makes the market more like the stock market, more volatile, more up and down. Over the past few weeks in July, it's been coming back up because interest rates finally got below 5% again.