Residential real estate stocks continued to fall Monday on the heels of President Donald Trump’s continued commitment to widespread tariffs.

Compass and brokerage holding firm Anywhere Real Estate each lost another roughly 2 percent off their open prices, while Douglas Elliman’s stock fell 4.8 percent and Re/Max fell over 5 percent.

Redfin, which has agreed to sell to Rocket Companies for $1.75 billion, fell even further, down 4.2 percent. Zillow, meanwhile, is down over 3 percent.

The one company in the sector that staved off the selloff last week, Rocket Companies, was also down 5 percent today.

The real estate sector mostly underperformed the market, with the S&P 500 down just .2 percent and the Nasdaq composite index flat.

Last week, Trump announced a baseline 10 percent tax on most U.S. trading partners, including a tax on Chinese goods of over 50 percent. China responded last Friday with a 34 percent tax on any U.S. goods entering its borders, and Trump has signaled he may escalate Chinese tariffs even further in response.

It’s an ill-timed shock for an industry that many expected to find its footing in 2025. Manhattan’s first-quarter residential sales were 29 percent above last year’s number as it appeared consumers adjusted to persistently high mortgage rates. Other markets saw similarly promising results in the first quarter, with South Florida seeing sales dollar volume surge this past January.

As a result, residential brokerages were poised for a banner — or better — year. Compass, for example, raised its full-year outlook in January and Anywhere expected to increase its 2025 operating EBITDA by $60 million compared to 2024.

The tariffs may have thrown all that out the window.

Immediate effects of the tariffs are already being felt on the supply slide of the market.

Developers that had been quiet due to a challenging financing environment had begun plans to bring inventory online for the upcoming years. Some are now reconsidering their plans.

Michigan-based luxury developer Andrew McCarthy said that he has already received a change order increasing the cost of elevators going into a two-unit boutique condo by 14 percent. The elevators are sourced from Canada.

He’s now in talks with Christie’s International Real Estate team, which is marketing the building, to figure out price points for a May 1 sales launch.

“You’re asking yourself are we marketable, are we competitive,” he said.

Developers that had been sourcing new projects are also recalculating how those projects will pencil, if they will at all. Homebuilders have already been dealing with increased labor costs following the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration.