What Participants Will Be Watching This Spring
Where strong listings move steadily, the market is healthy. Where they slow, it is usually a pricing or presentation signal. Early-stage seller conversations matter. These are the quiet conversations about whether, how, and when to come to market. Their pace is often a better leading indicator of the market than completed transactions. And buyers moving with clear due diligence lists are signaling confidence, even when they are slower to offer.
“The word of the year for everyone in our locale is urgency or lack thereof, to be more specific, for much of the market column,” commented Hall and Hall real estate partner Deke Tidwell, based in Missoula, Montana. “This unseasonably mild winter has produced notable early buyer activity for western Montana, but with few signed contracts to show for it. The lackluster and stagnant inventory has sidelined many buyers, preferring to wait for additional buying opportunities before pulling the trigger.”
“Many offerings available now are carried over from last year, providing little incentive. The weight of the post-COVID market may finally be apparent to some sellers who are forced to drastically reduce their pricing expectations to achieve a sale for anything other than A+ grade assets.”
“For the best of the best, there continues to be scarcity. Ranch properties with the trifecta of production, livewater or other significant recreational component and public land adjacency, the demand is extremely solid. The rest, if not priced appropriately from the outset, may tend to languish in the marketplace.”
Well-priced, well-prepared ranches continue to attract serious buyers, and well-advised sellers continue to transact on their own terms. For buyers and sellers working through what that means for their own plans, a clearer conversation with a broker who knows the specific region and property type remains the single most useful step.