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A new report from brokerage and online home listings site Redfin says bidding wars are not slowing down, even as the typically slow fall and winter months arrive.

The company surveyed its agents who said 56.8 percent of the offers they made faced competition in October, down only slightly from September, where 57.4 percent faced at least one other offer, and August, where that figure was 59.3 percent.

Competition in the housing market has remained fierce during the coronavirus pandemic due to record-low mortgage rates, a shortage of homes for sale and a sudden wave of migration made possible by remote work. This has triggered a surge in home prices in Connecticut and across the nation.

“Has the market calmed down since the summer? Yes, but every offer I submit still faces multiple competing bids and we continue to see a lot more buyers than we normally would at this time of year,” Melissa Killham, a Redfin real estate agent in Kenosha, Wisconsin, said in a statement released with the report. “The typical home today gets four or five offers, compared with eight or nine back in September. The buyers who are in the market right now don’t need to buy. They’re buying if they find the perfect home with more space and a big backyard, and if not, they’re staying put until they do.”

Some of the most competitive markets inlcuded Salt Lake City, Utah, where 75 percent of offers made by Redfin-represented buyers faced bidding wars in October, and Austin, Texas, where 68.4 percent of offers were in the same situation.

Condos were the least likely to encounter bidding wars in October, with 41.4 percent of Redfin offers facing competition. That compares with 56.8 percent of offers for townhomes, and 59.4 percent of offers for single-family homes.