Economists' Outlook

Housing stats and analysis from NAR's research experts.

EHS in 2015 by the Numbers – Part 4 – Contracts

This blog post was written by Managing Director of Housing Research, Danielle Hale, and Data Analyst, Hua Zhong.

You probably know that recent home listings went under contract slightly more often on Mondays followed by Tuesdays, and Fridays. Here is the data to back up your intuition:

  • As we start the New Year, this is a good time to take a look and recap the year behind us to see what insights 2014 holds for 2015. The last sales data for December 2015 is in, and we can get a good sense of the year by looking at the data we currently have for the past 12 months. In our first posts, we looked at popular and least common closing dates, and popular listing dates. Here, we’ll take a look at contracts.
  • Below, we see the most popular under-contract days of 2015[1].  Similar to the pattern in home listings, we see a strong preponderance of spring dates and lack of weekends.
  • The biggest months for new contracts in 2015 were April, May, and June. These months alone accounted for about 3 in 10 new contracts in this analysis.
  • While not devoid of contract activity, the weekends are not common contract signing days.  Among weekdays, Mondays followed by Tuesdays, and Fridays are the most common days for new contracts to be signed, though Wednesdays and Thursdays are only slightly less common. In spite of that fact, not a single Thursday made the list of top 25 days for contracts in 2015.
  • While home closings exhibit a strong tendency to get done at the end of the month, contracts are, like listings, much steadier throughout the course of the month. Listings show a slight tendency to be posted earlier rather than later in a month, and contracts have a very slight tendency to be signed more often in the early to middle portion of a month rather than at the end.
contract dates
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[1] This analysis includes listings that went under contract at any point in the period under observation, January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2015.  If two contracts existed in the observation period on the same listed property because, for example, one contract fell through and another contract was signed in a later month, both contract dates would be counted as “new contracts” in the analysis.  Thus, some contracts counted here may have fallen through.

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