Indianapolis-area home sales jump despite less-than-ideal buying conditions
Housing affordability is at a 10-year low, but home sales are still on the increase in central Indiana.
Housing affordability is at a 10-year low, but home sales are still on the increase in central Indiana.
Existing-home sales in central Indiana ticked up only slightly in December as inventories continued to shrink and price tags remained on the rise.
Closed sales in the 13-county area have risen every month on a year-over-year basis since October 2015.
Closed sales in the 13-county area have risen every month on a year-over-year basis since October 2015.
Opposition is growing to the city of Carmel’s order that homeowners remove their properties from Airbnb listings.
Existing-home sales in central Indiana soared 21 percent in November despite rising prices and a continuing decline in housing inventory.
The MIBOR Realtor Association on Thursday announced that Shelley Specchio will become CEO on Feb. 1, succeeding the retiring Steve Sullivan.
Existing-home sales in central Indiana rose 3.6 percent in October amid rising prices and a continuing decline in housing inventory.
Existing-home sales in central Indiana jumped 18.6 percent in May as average sale prices ticked up and inventory dropped significantly.
Existing-home sales in central Indiana jumped 12.4 percent in April as average sale prices rose slightly and inventory dropped significantly.
It concerns me that we may be building outdated technology.
Closed sales last year inched up 1.2 percent in 13 area counties and jumped 18.3 percent from July through December, bolstered by a 7.2-percent increase during the last month of 2011.
Your editorial in the March 29 edition praising State Farm and city leaders for the commitment to the [2012 Super Bowl] housing
“legacy project” was very commendable. But we do have a correction to what you stated about our piece of the project.
The Federal Trade Commission recently slammed the Austin Board of Realtors for how the Texas organization runs its multiple-listing service, charging that a policy change barring certain homes from Web search engines runs afoul of federal antitrust laws.