US Housing Industry News
The US housing market this week is defined by slightly easing financing costs, divergent regional prices, and a growing focus on affordability and partnerships. Freddie Mac’s latest survey shows the average 30 year fixed mortgage rate has edged down to the mid 6 percent range after flirting with 7 percent in recent months, giving buyers modest but welcome relief on monthly payments.[3] Compared with earlier this year, when rates were closer to recent highs, this is starting to bring some sidelined buyers back into the market, though demand remains price sensitive. On prices, national listing data over the past month shows the median asking price for homes across the US is down about 2 to 3 percent from a year earlier, the steepest year over year decline since at least 2017.[3] This is a notable shift from the flat to rising prices seen through much of last year and reflects both higher inventory and buyer resistance to previous price peaks. Regionally, conditions are mixed. In the Midwest, markets like Omaha remain very competitive, with a median sale price around 280 thousand dollars over the last three months, up about 4 percent from a year earlier, and typical homes selling in just over three weeks.[1] By contrast, several Sun Belt markets that overheated during the pandemic are cooler. In Atlanta, the median sale price over the last three months is roughly 425 thousand dollars, essentially flat year over year, while days on market have risen from about 57 to 64.[5] Austin shows even more adjustment, with a three month median price near 530 thousand dollars, down about 3 percent from last year, and prices per square foot off nearly 7 percent.[7] Industry leaders are responding on multiple fronts. Large homebuilders, according to recent National Association of Home Builders reporting, continue to use rate buydowns, closing cost incentives, and smaller floor plans to keep monthly payments manageable.[10] On the policy side, HUD is pressing states and localities to reduce impact fees, simplify building codes, and fast track permits to expand supply and lower costs, signaling continued federal pressure on regulatory barriers.[6] Affordability concerns are also accelerating partnerships. Recent coverage of nonprofit and public agency collaborations, such as neighborhood housing initiatives supported by Federal Home Loan Bank programs, underscores a shift toward cross sector models to finance and preserve affordable housing stock.[11] Compared with similar reports earlier this year, the key differences now are slightly lower mortgage rates, the first meaningful year over year decline in national listing prices in years, and a clearer split between still hot mid priced markets and cooling high growth metros. Consumer behavior is reflecting this: buyers are more selective, trading speed for negotiation power, while sellers are increasingly using price cuts and incentives instead of expecting automatic bidding wars. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
326 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de US Housing Industry News!