| Metric | Current | WoW Change | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price | $1,200,000 | → Flat / slight seasonal uptick | ↑ +3.9% |
| Price / Sq Ft | $696 | → Near flat | ↑ +2.9% |
| Active Inventory | ~4,600 listings | ↑ Up from ~3,866 earlier in spring | ↑ Higher vs early 2025; still below pre-2020 |
| Days on Market (avg) | ~25–45 days; ~70 days "expected market time" | ↑ Slightly higher vs earlier spring | ↑ Up vs 2025 as buyers price-check more |
| New Listings / Week | ~750–800 | ↑ Up with spring listing wave | ↑ Running ahead of last year's weekly counts |
| Pending Sales | ~1,650 (spring) | ↑ Slight uptick with rates stabilizing | → Near prior-year seasonal levels |
| Closed Sales (latest week) | ~450 | ↑ Rebounded from prior week's ~387 | ↑ Up modestly YoY; still below long-run norms |
| Sale-to-List Ratio | ~99–100% | → Stable | ↑ Slightly firmer vs 2025; fewer extreme over-ask outliers |
| Supply Constraint | Elevated | Despite rising active listings, OC and California statewide inventory (~103,000 homes) remain well below pre-pandemic norms, keeping sellers structurally advantaged in most quality submarkets. |
| Ownership Stability | High | Most existing owners carry sub-4% legacy debt and substantial equity cushions. Limited distress activity suppresses forced selling and keeps listing flows discretionary. |
| Liquidity Friction | Moderate to Elevated | Deals are clearing, but at the cost of longer DOM and more negotiation on concessions and buydowns. Friction is most visible in aspirational luxury and B-location/B-condition inventory. |
| Rate Sensitivity | Elevated | At mid-6%, payment loads materially shape search criteria for entry-level and move-up buyers. In higher-income coastal submarkets, sensitivity shows up as price discipline rather than market withdrawal. |
| Seller Capitulation Risk | Low to Moderate | Some luxury enclaves quietly discounting from peak, but strong balance sheets and low distress mean forced capitulation is rare. Primary adjustment mechanism is time, not price. |
| Buyer Leverage | Moderate, Uneven | Meaningful leverage on terms and pricing in segments with stacked inventory or longer DOM. In core family neighborhoods with tight supply and good schools, leverage is closer to neutral. |
| Capital Durability | High | FHFA raised conforming limits for 2026; multifamily agencies retain sizable purchase caps. High-income household demand and inflation-hedge capital continue to underpin coastal and job-rich submarkets. |
Latest decision & outlook: The FOMC has held the policy rate steady as inflation progress slowed, signaling a "higher for longer" bias with limited appetite for near-term cuts. Futures imply a flat path through mid-2026. Consensus clusters around the current 3.75% upper bound for year-end, with only shallow easing projected into 2027 — meaning mortgage rates are more likely to drift within a band than re-enter a sub-5% environment absent a sharp macro downturn.
Key risks: Inflation in the high-3% range keeps term premiums elevated. A still-solid labor market gives the Fed room to hold. Ongoing Treasury supply at a time of geopolitical uncertainty maintains upward pressure on long rates. Rising property insurance and HOA costs add to effective monthly housing carry, especially in coastal and fire-risk areas.
Structural impact: With capital anchored in a mid-6% mortgage world, the decision frame shifts from "waiting for rates to fall" to "optimizing structure" — buydowns, ARMs for sophisticated borrowers, and more conservative leverage. For sellers and investors, Fed policy is extending the holding horizon; fewer owners reset their rate upward unless there is a compelling lifestyle or capital redeployment reason.
| Metric | This Week | Last Week | Trend | Structural Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30-Yr Mortgage Rate (national) | ~6.56% | ~6.70% | ↓ Lower | Cost of capital easing at the margin, but still high enough to cap speculative demand. |
| 15-Yr Mortgage Rate (national) | ~5.92% | ~6.05% | ↓ Lower | Attractive for high-equity, high-income borrowers seeking faster amortization. |
| CA Active Listings (statewide) | ~103,000 | Slightly lower | → Structurally low | Chronic undersupply supports pricing, especially in coastal and job hubs. |
| OC Active Inventory | ~4,600 | Slightly below 4,600 | ↑ Gradually rising | More buyer choice, but not enough to flip leverage decisively to buyers. |
| Median DOM – OC | ~25–45 days | ~25–40 days | ↑ Slightly longer | More negotiation time; urgency has normalized versus 2021. |
| Pending Sales – OC | ~1,650 | Slightly lower | → Stable to modest improvement | Demand holding where pricing and payments align. |
| Price Reductions Share (SoCal) | Modest but rising vs 2025 | Lower base in 2025 | ↑ Edging higher | Growing price discovery, especially in higher-end and secondary locations. |
| Luxury Inventory (OC coastal $2M+) | Elevated vs 2023 | Slightly lower | → Plateauing at higher base | Buyers have more selection and deal leverage; sellers rely on capital strength rather than speed. |
The Southern California housing market is operating in a structurally constrained, higher-cost capital environment where decisions are more about alignment than timing the cycle. Supply remains too low to generate broad price weakness, but rates are high enough to enforce discipline on buyers, sellers, and investors. For clients, the advantage lies in clarity: knowing their time horizon, tolerance for payment risk, and capital stack before they enter the market — and then executing calmly within that framework rather than chasing headlines.