US Housing News
The US housing industry this week is defined by slowly improving affordability, resilient demand, and a persistent shortage of homes, even as rates and policy debates keep conditions fragile.[1][3][5] Mortgage rates have edged down to their lowest level since May, and that small shift is already moving consumer behavior.[5] The Mortgage Bankers Association reports purchase mortgage applications are up about 1 percent week over week and roughly 21 percent compared with a year ago, signaling that buyers are stepping back in when borrowing costs ease slightly.[5] Yet Lawrence Yun of the National Association of Realtors notes that sales volumes remain in a multiyear slump, even as prices stay near record highs because the country is still short an estimated 4 million housing units, with some estimates as high as 7 million.[1][3] Compared with earlier reporting from the past few years, the core imbalance between demand and supply has not been resolved; instead, modest rate relief is unlocking only part of the pent up demand.[1] Recent deals highlight how capital is flowing most aggressively into multifamily and affordable housing. In the past few days, LCOR secured about 192 and a half million dollars in construction financing for a 544 unit luxury rental tower in Miami, despite concerns about oversupply in South Florida apartments.[2] In New York, Governor Kathy Hochul announced the start of construction on the 167 million dollar Chelsea Beacon redevelopment in Manhattan, which will create up to 131 permanently affordable homes, including at least 79 supportive units, backed by roughly 39.6 million dollars in tax exempt bonds and more than 70 million in federal low income housing tax credit equity.[4] These projects show how developers and public agencies are leaning on tax credits and large scale financing to add supply where demand is strongest. Institutional investors, once blamed for distorting the market, now own only about 2.2 percent of US housing stock and are buying fewer homes than they are selling.[3] That marks a shift from earlier narratives and suggests that today’s tight inventory is driven more by long term underbuilding and by existing owners staying put than by investor buying.[1][3] Taken together, the current state of US housing is one of gradual thaw: slightly lower rates, more construction in high demand urban and Sun Belt markets, and renewed public investment in affordability, set against a still severe structural shortage and cautious consumer optimism.[1][2][3][4][5] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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