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U.S. Housing Market Shows Signs of Thaw But Affordability Remains Key Barrier in 2024

2 min · 10 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio U.S. Housing Market Shows Signs of Thaw But Affordability Remains Key Barrier in 2024

Descripción

The U.S. housing market has shown a modest thaw over the past 48 hours, but conditions remain constrained by high borrowing costs and tight inventory. Existing home sales rose 3.2 percent in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.17 million, above forecasts, while the median existing home price reached a record May level of 429,300 dollars and inventory edged up to 1.55 million homes, equal to 4.5 months of supply.[1][2] That is an improvement from the slower pace seen earlier this spring, but it does not yet signal a broad recovery. Mortgage rates remain elevated at about 6.50 percent as of June 8, which continues to weigh on affordability and keeps many buyers cautious.[8] At the same time, some markets are cooling rather than accelerating. In Austin, for example, the median sale price fell 2.3 percent year over year in the three months ending in May, even as sales volume rose, showing how local conditions can diverge sharply from the national trend.[7] Recent reporting also points to shifting consumer behavior. Buyers are taking longer to act, while sellers in some areas are delisting homes rather than cutting prices, suggesting pressure is building on the supply side as demand softens.[4] Bank of America notes that days on market are rising year over year and active listings are up about 10 percent, reinforcing the view that the market is moving toward a slower, more balanced phase.[6] For industry leaders, the response is increasingly tactical: pricing more carefully, managing longer listing times, and adjusting to a market where affordability remains the main barrier. Compared with prior reporting, the latest data suggest a market that is thawing at the margins, but still far from a full rebound.[1][6][8] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ

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episode U.S. Housing Market Shows Signs of Thaw But Affordability Remains Key Barrier in 2024 artwork

U.S. Housing Market Shows Signs of Thaw But Affordability Remains Key Barrier in 2024

The U.S. housing market has shown a modest thaw over the past 48 hours, but conditions remain constrained by high borrowing costs and tight inventory. Existing home sales rose 3.2 percent in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.17 million, above forecasts, while the median existing home price reached a record May level of 429,300 dollars and inventory edged up to 1.55 million homes, equal to 4.5 months of supply.[1][2] That is an improvement from the slower pace seen earlier this spring, but it does not yet signal a broad recovery. Mortgage rates remain elevated at about 6.50 percent as of June 8, which continues to weigh on affordability and keeps many buyers cautious.[8] At the same time, some markets are cooling rather than accelerating. In Austin, for example, the median sale price fell 2.3 percent year over year in the three months ending in May, even as sales volume rose, showing how local conditions can diverge sharply from the national trend.[7] Recent reporting also points to shifting consumer behavior. Buyers are taking longer to act, while sellers in some areas are delisting homes rather than cutting prices, suggesting pressure is building on the supply side as demand softens.[4] Bank of America notes that days on market are rising year over year and active listings are up about 10 percent, reinforcing the view that the market is moving toward a slower, more balanced phase.[6] For industry leaders, the response is increasingly tactical: pricing more carefully, managing longer listing times, and adjusting to a market where affordability remains the main barrier. Compared with prior reporting, the latest data suggest a market that is thawing at the margins, but still far from a full rebound.[1][6][8] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ

10 de jun de 20262 min
episode US Housing Market Shifts to Buyer Power as Inventory Rises and Sales Slow in 2026 artwork

US Housing Market Shifts to Buyer Power as Inventory Rises and Sales Slow in 2026

The US housing market over the past 48 hours is navigating a cooler but more stable environment, with rising inventory, slower sales pace, and still-elevated mortgage costs shaping behavior on both sides of the transaction. Fresh listing data for early summer 2026 shows days on market nationally hovering around 70 days in February, down seasonally from 78 days in January but up about six days versus a year earlier, indicating a slower, more negotiable market than in 2025 and far from the frenzy of 2021 to 2022. Active listings are roughly 10 percent higher than a year ago, yet still about 17 percent below pre pandemic norms, so conditions feel looser but not flooded with supply. Mortgage rates on a 30 year fixed are stabilizing near the low 6 percent range, keeping affordability strained even as bidding wars cool. Regional data from major metros underline a split market. In St Louis, the median sale price over the three months ending in April was about 245,000 dollars, up 6.5 percent year over year, with homes selling in roughly 30 days compared with 24 days a year earlier, and sales volumes slightly lower. In Atlanta, prices are effectively flat, with a median of about 425,000 dollars, down a fraction from last year, while days on market climbed from about 57 to 64 days and closed sales fell modestly. This pattern of slower sales, mild price gains in some markets, and small price declines in others is becoming more common. Consumer behavior is shifting from urgency to patience. Buyers are less willing to waive contingencies and more focused on monthly payment rather than headline price, while sellers are increasingly offering concessions instead of aggressive list price cuts. Builders and large single family landlords are responding by emphasizing rate buydowns, smaller or more energy efficient floor plans, and build to rent product to reach payment constrained households. Compared with reports from late 2025, the current state features slightly better inventory, marginally more buyer leverage, and price growth that is slower and more uneven across markets, yet no broad based price collapse. The industry is in a transitional phase, adjusting operations, incentives, and product mix to a world where 6 percent mortgage rates and longer marketing times are the new normal. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ

Ayer2 min
episode US Housing in 2026: Why Mortgage Rates Still Matter More Than Ever artwork

US Housing in 2026: Why Mortgage Rates Still Matter More Than Ever

The US housing industry is entering early June in a holding pattern marked by high but slightly easing borrowing costs, slower sales velocity, and selective strength in new construction and multifamily investment. Mortgage rates remain the central pressure point. Freddie Mac’s latest weekly survey shows the average 30 year fixed rate edging down to around 6.48 percent after touching a nine month high near 6.53 percent, offering marginal relief but keeping financing far more expensive than in the prepandemic era.[3] Rates have hovered in the mid 6s for weeks, and research from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis indicates that higher mortgage rates are pushing up mortgage application denial rates, particularly for low to moderate income borrowers and those in high cost markets.[5] Combined with a prime rate near 6.75 percent and a 10 year Treasury yield around 4.55 percent, credit remains tight for both households and developers.[4] On the sales side, national conditions are cooler than in 2021 and 2022. Bank of America’s early 2026 data shows days on market rising across most major metros and active listings roughly 10 percent higher than a year earlier, though still about 17 percent below 2017 to 2019 norms.[1] Median days on market are near 70, well above the hyper competitive period but consistent with a more balanced, negotiation friendly environment.[1] Compared with late 2025 reporting, this continues a gradual normalization rather than a sharp downturn. Consumer behavior is adjusting. Buyers are more payment sensitive, often trading down in size or location to offset higher rates, while many would be sellers remain locked in by sub 4 percent mortgages, constraining resale inventory. Higher denial rates are shifting demand toward rentals and build to rent communities, reinforcing steady investor interest in multifamily assets.[5][11] Industry leaders are responding with targeted strategies. Developers and owners are pursuing value add and adaptive reuse deals, like recent multifamily acquisitions and redevelopment financings reported in sector news, to meet rental demand without relying solely on new ground up projects.[11] Public and quasi public housing agencies are leaning on partnership models such as NYCHA’s PACT program to modernize aging stock while preserving affordability, signaling continued policy reliance on private capital to bridge funding gaps.[2] Overall, the current US housing landscape is best described as constrained but not crisis level: elevated costs, modestly improving supply, softer demand, and a slow shift in bargaining power back toward buyers and renters compared with the frenzy of recent years.[1][3][5] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ

8 de jun de 20263 min
episode US Housing Market Shifts: Lower Rates, Softer Prices, and the Return to Affordability artwork

US Housing Market Shifts: Lower Rates, Softer Prices, and the Return to Affordability

The US housing industry is in a fragile, slow‑thaw phase, shaped by slightly lower borrowing costs, softening list prices, and persistent supply constraints. Over the past week, the headline shift has been on financing. Average long term US mortgage rates have edged down to roughly the mid 6 percent range after touching recent highs, easing monthly payments for some buyers but still well above the 3 percent levels of the pandemic boom.[3] This has unlocked a bit of pent up demand but not enough to trigger a new surge in sales. On prices, national listing data show the median US asking price fell about 2.4 percent year over year last month, the steepest decline in records going back to 2017.[3] This marks a clear break from the rapid appreciation of 2020 to 2022 and even from the flat to slightly rising prices seen in 2024. Yet the pattern is uneven. In Atlanta, the median sale price over the last three months was about 425 thousand dollars, essentially flat, down 0.05 percent from a year earlier, and homes are taking longer to sell, around 64 days versus 57 days a year ago.[5] In Austin, median sale prices over the same window were about 530 thousand dollars, down 3.3 percent year over year, with days on market roughly unchanged near 59 days.[7] By contrast, Omaha’s median sale price over the last three months rose about 4 percent year over year to 280 thousand dollars, with homes still selling in just over three weeks.[1] These numbers point to a shift in consumer behavior. Move up buyers remain cautious, locked into older low rate mortgages and reluctant to trade into higher payments. Affordability pressure has pushed more households toward renting and toward more affordable metros like Omaha, while expensive markets such as Austin are seeing modest price corrections.[1][7] Industry leaders are responding on several fronts. State and local housing finance agencies are expanding down payment assistance and specialized loan products to keep first time buyers in the market, as in Ohio, where programs now bundle below market interest rates with closing cost support.[8] Public agencies and nonprofits are also leaning into partnerships to add affordable units. Recent planning work at local housing authorities and neighborhood based organizations focuses on using federal HOME funds and similar programs to preserve and rehabilitate lower cost housing rather than only building new units.[4][11] Compared with conditions reported a year ago, today’s market features slightly easier credit costs than at recent peaks, flatter or gently falling prices instead of broad increases, modestly slower sales in several large metros, and an industry strategy that is shifting from chasing rapid growth to carefully rebuilding affordability. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ

5 de jun de 20263 min
episode Spring Housing Market Fizzles: Slower Sales, Longer Days on Market, and Weak Price Growth in 2026 artwork

Spring Housing Market Fizzles: Slower Sales, Longer Days on Market, and Weak Price Growth in 2026

The US housing market this week is limping out of the key spring selling season, with activity notably cooler than industry hopes for a major rebound.[5] Many analysts expected sub 5 percent mortgage rates and a wave of pent up demand to reignite sales, but that surge has largely failed to materialize.[5] Recent data show homes staying on the market longer and sellers increasingly unwilling to meet buyer expectations. In April, 5.8 percent of US listings were taken off the market, tying December 2025 for the highest delisting share since early 2020.[3] Delistings rose 3.8 percent month over month on a seasonally adjusted basis, signaling growing seller frustration in what is effectively a buyer leaning market.[3] At the same time, inventory has improved compared with last year but remains below pre pandemic norms. Early 2026 data show active listings roughly 10 percent higher than a year earlier, yet still about 17 percent below 2017 to 2019 levels.[1] Homes are taking about six days longer to sell than a year ago, and national median days on market in early 2026 is around 70, well above the rapid turnover of 2021 and 2022.[1] Price growth is subdued. Recent reporting indicates consumer price inflation of about 2.4 percent has outpaced average home price gains, putting real house price appreciation in negative territory.[4] This contrasts with previous years when home values were rising much faster than inflation.[4] Consumers are behaving more cautiously. Buyers are slower to bid and more willing to walk away, while sellers who cannot achieve 2022 style prices are opting to delist and wait.[3][5] Industry leaders are responding by emphasizing price cuts, rate buydowns, and more flexible terms to attract qualified buyers, especially in high inventory metros.[1][5] Compared with late 2025, when conditions were already cooling, the current moment reflects a further shift toward a slower, more negotiable market: more listings than a year ago, more delistings, weaker real price growth, and a spring season that ended with a whimper rather than the hoped for breakout.[1][3][4][5] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ

4 de jun de 20262 min