US Housing News
In the past 48 hours, the U.S. housing market has shown a mix of cooling prices, still-elevated financing costs, and continued stress on affordability. Fresh data reported in the last week shows the average 30 year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.52 percent on June 11, its third increase in four weeks, which is keeping monthly payments high even as some home prices soften[7]. At the same time, Redfin data cited this week says the median listing price of existing U.S. homes fell 2.4 percent year over year in May to 429,500 dollars, the largest annual decline reported since at least 2017, while prices also fell in 35 of the 50 largest metros[1]. The clearest market signal is that buyers remain cautious and sellers are starting to concede on price. Redfin reported a 3,000 dollar weekly drop in the median U.S. home price to 416,623 dollars, the first decline so far this year[1]. That lines up with broader reports that demand is weakening because mortgage rates and inflation are squeezing affordability[1][7]. Compared with earlier reporting that described persistent shortages and strong competition, the current tone is more balanced and in some markets distinctly softer[9]. Industry responses are increasingly focused on partnerships and affordability programs. In Maine, state leaders extended the Affordable Housing Tax Credit in April to help finance and preserve hundreds of homes, underscoring how public and private collaboration is being used to offset tight supply[2]. Habitat for Humanity partners are also highlighting corporate support, including long running backing from Wells Fargo in Denver, as builders and nonprofits try to keep entry level housing moving despite higher costs[4]. Consumer behavior is shifting toward delay, renovation, and selective buying rather than aggressive bidding. Reports this week suggest many households are choosing to improve existing homes instead of moving, a sign that current rates and prices are discouraging trade ups[9]. Regional data also show uneven conditions: Charlotte, for example, still posted a 2.3 percent annual price gain over the last three months, but homes took longer to sell than a year ago, suggesting slower momentum even in healthier markets[3]. Overall, the U.S. housing sector is now being shaped less by runaway demand and more by affordability pressure, slower sales, and targeted policy and nonprofit responses[1][2][7]. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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