Coming for us next?

From Newsweek:

Florida’s Housing Market Has ‘Flipped’ for Homebuyers

Florida’s housing market has “flipped” for homebuyers, according to real estate analyst Nick Gerli, but not the way they might have wished for.

While the Sunshine State can solidly be considered a buyer’s market, as homes are taking the longest in the country to sell and inventory has risen by double-digits in recent months, locals are just not earning enough to afford the properties for sale.

“The growth in inventory in Florida has started alleviating buyer’s affordability issues. Home values are down 4.7 percent over the last year, and now the salary needed to buy in Florida is down to $98,000, which is an improvement from several years ago,” Gerli, CEO of Reventure App, told Newsweek. “However, the market is still about two times more expensive than it was before the pandemic.”

Redfin data shows that the median sale price of a home in Florida was $404,200 in July, down 1.3 percent from a year earlier. It marked the fifth consecutive month of year-over-year price declines, as the state’s housing market has experienced a stark slowdown since the start of the year due to booming inventory and falling demand.

However, improvements in affordability are unlikely to feel significant to many buyers in the state struggling with other issues—including high home insurance premiums and rising homeowners association fees.

“A return to pre-pandemic affordability is unlikely in Reventure’s baseline forecast, as we expect prices to drop another 6.3 percent over the next 12 months,” Gerli told Newsweek.

“However, if there were to be a serious recession, or increase in mortgage defaults in Florida, then further downside is possible. Overall, we think a 20 percent correction in the state is likely.”

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 57 Comments

Pay more and you too can be close to celebrity

From the Realtors:

New Jersey Is Poised To Become a New Celebrity Hot Spot Thanks to Netflix’s Presence

Hollywood, New York City, Miami, Aspen. When you think of hot spots where you might have an unexpected celebrity sighting, those cities usually top the list. But fairly soon, there may be another contender: Monmouth County, NJ.

Thanks to Netflix’s new $1 billion investment to transform the previously shuttered 292-acre former Fort Monmouth U.S. Army base into its East Coast production hub, things are about to heat up on the Jersey Shore. Not only will more celebrities be working at the film and TV facility, but businesses (including real estate) in the vicinity are about to get a starry boost.

“As someone who has lived, worked, and raised a family here in Monmouth County for many years, I can tell you firsthand that there’s already been an uptick in interest since the Netflix Studios announcement,” Teresa Minnick, a broker with Christie’s International Real Estate Group and director of sales for The Atlantic Club Residences, a posh new luxury development in Long Branch, NJ, tells Realtor.com®.

Though the new Netflix Studios won’t be completed until 2028, the surrounding hubbub is leading some forward-thinking buyers, including celebrities, to property shop now—before the area explodes.

“I never had celebrity showings, and I’ve had three of them in the last five weeks,” Aleksander Pritsker, CEO of Team Blackstar at eXp Realty, said recently on “The BRO Show” podcast. “They’re coming in and scoping, they’re looking, they’re seeing what’s out there.”

In other words, the presence of Netflix is primed to reshape the entire demographic of the Jersey Shore, including adding more star power.

Posted in Humor, New Development, New Jersey Real Estate, Shore Real Estate | 88 Comments

More markets weaken

From FastCompany:

Housing markets with falling home prices just hit highest level since 2012

Among the nation’s 200 largest metro-area housing markets:

  • 62% saw home prices rise year over year from July 2024 to July 2025
  • 38% saw home prices fall year over year from July 2024 to July 2025

That’s the highest share of housing markets with falling year-over-year home prices since October 2012—when the housing market was starting to rebound following the 2007-2011 housing market crash.

Most housing markets are still seeing rising home prices on a year-over-year basis; however, the share of markets with falling year-over-year home prices is ticking up.

Posted in Housing Bubble, National Real Estate, Price Reduced | 77 Comments

Dip in rates gets buyers moving again

Why homebuyers are rushing back sooner than expected

There’s good news for prospective homebuyers and current homeowners. Mortgage rates have ticked down in recent weeks. Unsurprisingly, the downtrend has caused the number of mortgage applications to surge, benefiting current homeowners.

According to a September 10 Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) press release, loan applications increased 9.2% on a seasonally adjusted basis last week from the week prior. Applications for refinancing were up 12%, too, from the previous week, and were a whopping 34% higher than the same week one year ago. 

Joel Kan, MBA’s vice president and deputy chief economist, explained in the release that the dropping interest rates are a sign of a weakened labor market, noting that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage dropped to 6.49 percent—the lowest since last October. 

“The downward rate movement spurred the strongest week of borrower demand since 2022, with both purchase and refinance applications moving higher. Purchase applications increased to the highest level since July and continued to run more than 20 percent ahead of last year’s pace,” Kan said.

He added: “The holiday-adjusted refinance index had its strongest week in a year, and the average loan size for refinances also increased significantly, since borrowers with large loans are more sensitive to bigger rate moves. Refinance applications accounted for almost 49 percent of all applications last week.”

The refreshing numbers come as many prospective homebuyers have seemed to accept higher interest rates as a new reality. According to a recent TurboHome-ResiClub Housing Sentiment Survey, in Q1 2025, 41% of homeowners said they’d accept a mortgage rate up to 6.0% on their next purchase. By Q3, the figure had risen to 52% of homeowners. 

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, Mortgages, National Real Estate | 150 Comments

September Home Price Insights

From Cotality (aka CoreLogic):

US home price insights — September 2025

Summertime home sales are sluggish. In July, price growth dipped to 1.4%, which is well below the 2.7% rate of inflation recorded in the Consumer Price Index during that same period. However, the national average glosses over pockets of growth around the U.S.  

There are some markets, particularly in the Northeast and in the Midwest, where housing fundamentals remain strong and are supporting continued home price increases. States like West Virginia and South Dakota remain attractive thanks to their relative affordability. This is influencing people to move into these states which, in turn, is pushing up prices. West Virginia and South Dakota saw home prices rise 5.7% and 6.2%, respectively.  

“July’s decline in home prices is atypical — the last two periods where we saw monthly declines in July was in 2022 and during 2006-2008 period —  but this year’s decline follows a year of relatively flat home prices and persistent weakness in homebuying demand,” Cotality’s Chief Economist Dr. Selma Hepp explained. “And even though price weakness has spread across more markets, 50% continue to see prices increase. The markets where prices are increasing tend to be more affordable markets in Midwest, such as the Chicago metro; Indianapolis; Cleveland; Tulsa OK; and Louisville, KY; as well as Philadelphia and the New York metro. At the same time, Florida markets and those in the West continue to see persistent price declines.” 

Across the nation, for-sale inventory is growing. While this is providing more options for buyers to choose from, affordability still remains a hurdle for many. Homebuyers need an additional $200,000 compared to 10 years ago to close on a median-priced home, Cotality data found. Still, the number of pending sales is increasing compared to last year, but these deals are more difficult to close, and sometimes even falling through, as buyers and sellers struggle with differing expectations.  

Some markets like Los Angeles and Washington D.C. are seeing more homes sell below asking price. These two markets also saw overall home prices decline. Los Angeles recorded a –0.03% drop from June to July 2025 while Washington D.C. saw a –0.2% drop from July 2024 to July 2025. In July, home prices fell in half of the 100 largest metro areas. Typically, prices rise by an average of 0.4% in July based on data from 2015 to 2019. 

These recent price dips are incentivizing investors. Investor activity remains elevated this year when compared to previous years, with investors making about one-third of total home purchases across the U.S. The higher share of investor purchases in the market is largely due to a decline in owner-occupied transactions, and these elevated levels are expected to remain steady through the end of 2025. 

While price increases have moderated, home costs continue to rise, with this month’s median sales price for single-family homes reaching $405,000. Although the national median remains elevated, the pace of home price appreciation is currently trailing inflation. Consequently, housing affordability is gradually improving, providing more prospective buyers an opportunity to enter the property market.

Posted in Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 160 Comments

Will the drop in rates reignite the market?

From the Realtors:

August 2025 Monthly Housing Market Trends Report

  • Inventory of homes for sale grew for the 22nd straight month: Active listings grew by 20.9% year over year, exceeding 1 million active listings for the fourth consecutive month.
  • Supply recovery has slowed: Inventory gains decelerated from 31.5% year over year in May to 20.9% in August, while the gap to pre-pandemic levels widened to 14.3%, signaling a stalling recovery.
  • Market momentum has faded: Pending home sales fell 1.3% year over year, new listings grew just 4.9% and have now declined for four straight months. Homes are sitting longer at 60 days on the market (+7 days YoY), now above pre-pandemic norms for the second month in a row.
  • Prices remain flat: The national median list price held at $429,990 (unchanged YoY, down 2.2% MoM), with softer trends in the South and West, underscoring seller frustration as affordability remains stretched.
  • Sellers are feeling the pressure: 20.3% of listings had price cuts, with the South and West seeing the sharpest adjustments. Delistings rose 57% year over year, further indication of a seller pullback.
  • The national market is ‘balanced,’ but this varies widely: New metro-level months of supply data from Realtor.com®show 7 buyer’s markets, 20 seller’s markets, and 23 in balance among the 50 largest metros. 

Where Housing Inventory Is Growing the Fastest

Inventory increased in all four major U.S. regions in August, but the pace of that growth has slowed recently.

  • West: +26.7% 
  • South: +21.8%
  • Midwest: +15.5%
  • Northeast: +14.2%

At the metro level, all of the 50 largest markets recorded year-over-year inventory growth. These markets saw the sharpest increases:

  • Washington, DC (+54.7%)*
  • Las Vegas (+48.2%)
  • Raleigh (+42.3%)
Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 175 Comments

The most valuable market in the world?

From CNN:

America’s housing market gained $20,000,000,000,000 in 5 years

Buying a home has become increasingly pricey in the past few years. Now, Zillow has put a staggering number to those higher costs: America’s housing market has climbed 57% since 2020, to a record $55 trillion.

That means that in just five years, the US housing market’s value has climbed $20 trillion, according to data from the real estate company released Monday.

Zillow’s findings highlight a housing market that remains historically expensive, with values climbing even as elevated mortgage rates sideline would-be buyers and force more sellers to slash asking prices.

But the housing market’s gains haven’t been spread evenly in 2025. New York added $216 billion in value over the last year, more than any other state. New Jersey, Illinois and Pennsylvania were close behind.

“Demand continues to outpace supply in the Northeast,” Orphe Divounguy, a senior economist at Zillow, said. “When you look at housing inventory in New York, there are only half as many homes for sale as there were before the pandemic. So you have the value of the existing housing stock really rising a lot in that market.”

In contrast, pandemic-era boom states Florida, California and Texas lost billions in their housing markets in 2025. Once magnets for buyers seeking sunshine – and often looser Covid restrictions – demand has started to cool off in these states.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 93 Comments

Poised to fall?

From Norada:

4 States Dominate as the Riskiest Housing Markets in 2025

As we navigate the housing market in 2025, a clear picture is emerging: California, Florida, Louisiana, and New Jersey are showing the highest levels of risk, according to ATTOM’s latest data. Homeownership, a dream for many, is becoming a significant financial tightrope walk in these areas, driven by a challenging mix of high living costs, precarious job markets, and housing values that are starting to feel the strain.

It’s easy to get caught up in the headlines about soaring home prices, and believe me, those numbers can be staggering. But as someone who’s been tracking real estate trends for a while, I know that price tags are only a piece of a much bigger puzzle. What really matters is whether people can actually afford to keep those homes, month after month, year after year. And in several states, that ability is seriously being tested.

When we talk about a “risky” housing market, we’re not just saying property values might drop a little. We’re looking at a combination of factors that create a genuine threat of financial instability for homeowners. This includes how much of their income people need to fork over for mortgage payments, property taxes, and insurance. It also looks at whether people owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth (that’s being “underwater”), how many people are actually falling behind on their payments or facing foreclosure, and the general health of the local job market.

New Jersey: The Garden State’s Growing Pains

New Jersey, often seen as a commuter state for New York and Philadelphia, is also grappling with housing market risks, with five counties appearing on ATTOM’s list of the 50 highest-risk markets.

The Garden State’s housing market is significantly impacted by its high property taxes and the general cost of living. This can make affordability a major concern, even for those with relatively good incomes. When you add in the potential for economic slowdowns in surrounding major metropolitan areas or shifts in employment trends, the pressure on New Jersey homeowners can intensify.

While specific foreclosure and unemployment data for individual counties within New Jersey might vary, the presence of several counties on the broader “riskiest” list suggests a widespread pattern of financial strain. We see counties like Cumberland County, NJ, flagged as one of the riskiest due to a combination of factors. This might include a less robust job market compared to neighboring states or areas where housing prices, while not as extreme as California, still represent a significant burden on household budgets.

Posted in Crisis, Economics, Housing Bubble, New Jersey Real Estate | 64 Comments

Krugman on housing

From Paul Krugman:

Yes, America Has a Housing Emergency

Something strange may be about to happen. It looks as if Trump officials will soon declare that we face a national housing emergency — and they’ll be telling the truth! We do, in fact, face such an emergency.

Unfortunately, everything Trump is doing that affects housing availability will make the emergency worse.

Given this pattern, the scariest words in the English language right now may be “Trump officials declare that we are facing a national emergency.” So I got a sinking feeling when I saw Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary, saying that the administration may soon declare a national housing emergency.

The thing is, Bessent isn’t wrong. We do, in fact, have a housing emergency. Over the past decade home prices have risen much faster than the overall cost of living, so the popular perception that housing has become unaffordable is grounded in reality.

Why has this been happening? The home price surge since 2015 looks very different from the housing bubble of the 2000s. That bubble was largely driven by speculation, with house prices rising much faster than rents. The price surge also bypassed sunbelt cities like Atlanta, Houston and Dallas, where housing supply expanded to meet rising demand.

This time, however, we’re looking at a truly national phenomenon. As Edward Glaeser and Joseph Gyourko document in a recent paper, housing prices have risen rapidly, without eliciting a large increase in homebuilding, even in cities that avoided the 2000s bubble.

Which brings me back to Bessent saying that we have a housing emergency. What will he do about it?

Another man, in another administration, might go YIMBY — “yes in my backyard” — and try to tackle the political obstacles to housing construction. But take a look at Mandate for Leadership, the manifesto issued by the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025. It’s all for deregulation when it comes to things like pollution controls. But when it comes to housing, it goes full NIMBY:

Congress should prioritize any and all legislative support for the single-family home … American homeowners and citizens know best what is in the interest of their neighborhoods and communities. Localities rather than the federal government must have the final say in zoning laws and regulations, and a conservative Administration should oppose any efforts to weaken single-family zoning.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, Politics | 35 Comments

Mortgage rates hit a 5 handle?

From Quartz:

Mortgage rates hit lowest daily level since fall 2024

Following a Friday jobs report that showed a labor market in the red zone, Mortgage News Daily reported that the average for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage dropped to 6.29% Friday. The day before it was at 6.45%. 

The outlet said this is the same level as what the market saw in the fall of last year. Mortgage rates haven’t been below 6% since September 2022, according to Freddie Mac data

MND’s COO Matt Graham said in a post on X that “many lenders are priced better than 10/3/24 at rates of 6.125%, and many lenders will be quoting in the high 5’s today.”

Graham wrote in MND’s article that “weaker jobs numbers prompt investors to buy bonds,” adding that when “investors buy bonds, the price of those bonds goes up” and when “bond prices go up, rates go down.”

Friday’s latest jobs report showed an already weak market cooling down even more. For the month of August, nonfarm payrolls rose by just 22,000, the weakest monthly gain since April — and significantly short of economists’ expectations of roughly 75,000 new jobs. 

Posted in Economics, Housing Bubble, Mortgages, National Real Estate | 24 Comments

$20k is the new $10k

From the Bergen Record:

Which North Jersey town is most expensive? Highest average property tax in Bergen, Passaic

Top 10 towns in Bergen County

  • Demarest: $24,736.
  • Tenafly: $23,833.
  • Alpine: $22,581.
  • Ridgewood: $20,370.
  • Haworth: $20,090.
  • Saddle River: $19,758.
  • Upper Saddle River: $19,739.
  • Woodcliff Lake: $19,624.
  • Franklin Lakes: $19,374.
  • Glen Rock: $19,297.

Top 10 towns in Passaic County

  • Wayne: $13,698.
  • Prospect Park: $12,651.
  • Ringwood: $12,620.
  • Haledon: $12,230.
  • Bloomingdale: $11,740.
  • North Haledon: $11,709.
  • Woodland Park: $11,634.
  • Hawthorne: $11,604.
  • Passaic: $11,355.
  • Pompton Lakes: $11,007.

Posted in Economics, New Jersey Real Estate, Property Taxes | 114 Comments

Housing prices to “normalize”

We’ve heard this before… From Fortune:

The housing market is no longer a wealth-building engine as home prices continue to slump

High home prices and mortgage rates have created unaffordable conditions for many Americans, but the housing market’s ability to create more wealth has sputtered.

That’s because even as home prices continue to hover around record levels, they are also edging lower and lagging behind the rate of inflation, which has heated up amid President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

“For the first time in years, home prices are failing to keep pace with broader inflation,” said Nicholas Godec, head of Fixed Income Tradables & Commodities at S&P Dow Jones Indices, in a statement on Tuesday. The last time that happened was mid-2023.

The latest S&P Cotality Case-Shiller home price data showed that the 20-city index fell 0.3% in June from the prior month, marking the fourth consecutive monthly decline. 

On an annual basis, the 20-city composite was up 2.1%, down from a 2.8% increase in the previous month, and the national index saw a 1.9% yearly gain, down from 2.3%. Meanwhile, the consumer price index rose 2.7% in June from a year ago.

“This reversal is historically significant: During the pandemic surge, home values were climbing at double-digit annual rates that far exceeded inflation, building substantial real wealth for homeowners,” Godec added. “Now, American housing wealth has actually declined in inflation-adjusted terms over the past year—a notable erosion that reflects the market’s new equilibrium.”

Weak prices suggest underlying housing demand remains muted, he said, despite the spring and summer historically being the peak period for homebuying.

In fact, this year’s selling season has been a bust. While sales of existing homes have ticked up recently, they are still subdued and prices are flat. In addition, sales of new homes are slumping with prices down.

“Looking ahead, this housing cycle’s maturation appears to be settling around inflation-parity growth rather than the wealth-building engine of recent years,” he said.

That’s as pandemic-era hot spots in the Sun Belt have cooled off with demand increasingly tilting toward established industrial centers that enjoy sustainable fundamentals like employment growth, greater affordability, and favorable demographics.

“While this represents a loss of the extraordinary gains homeowners enjoyed from 2020-2022, it may signal a healthier long-term trajectory where housing appreciation aligns more closely with broader economic fundamentals rather than speculative excess,” Godec added.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Employment, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 115 Comments

Canada – take the money and run

From Mortgage Professional:

Canadians are flocking away from the US housing market

More than half of Canadians who own US residential properties are considering selling within the next year, according to a Royal LePage survey.  

Of those planning to sell, 62% cited the current US political administration, while 33% pointed to reduced travel or financial factors, and 5% mentioned extreme weather risks. Canadians who already sold shared similar reasons, with 44% citing politics and 22% weather-related issues. 

Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper noted that decisions to divest are not solely political. Some Canadians are opting to focus investments domestically or are finding the distance and upkeep of US properties challenging.  

Meanwhile, US interest in Canadian real estate has surged during politically charged events, with Royal LePage reporting spikes in web traffic from US buyers during protests and elections. 

Despite the sell-offs, only 32% of Canadians plan to reinvest their proceeds in the Canadian market, while 45% say they will not. Soper warned that US communities popular with Canadians—such as Florida, Arizona, and California—could see declines in local economic activity tied to Canadian homeowners. 

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate, Politics | 66 Comments

July Market Highlights

From mycentraljersey.com:

How the Central Jersey real estate market performed last month

New Jersey’s hot real estate market did not cool in July, as the average single-family home sold for $776,166, a 6.6% increase over July 2024.

The county with the highest median sale price of a single-family home in July, according to the monthly survey by New Jersey Realtors, was Essex at $878,000. The lowest was Salem at $280,000.

Single-family homes statewide sold for 103.2% of their list price.

But not all parts of the market were hot. Statewide, the average price for a condominium or townhouse dropped by 0.03% to $527,380 over July 2024. The average sales price year to date increased 3.9% to $529,397.

Condominiums and townhouses sold for 100.7% of their list price.

In July, the number of single-family homes on the market was 7,614, a 21% increase above the 12-month average of 6,284. The number of new listings reached a high in May at 7,987.

Middlesex and Ocean counties led the state in the number of pending sales, closings and active listings.

Central Jersey real estate highlights July 2025

  • The inventory of homes for sale in Middlesex County jumped by 27.2% from 732 to 931 over July 2024.
  • In Hunterdon County, the number of homes for sale dropped 2.3% from 259 to 253 over July 2024.
  • The number of days a single-family home was on the market was 23 in Union County, 25 in Somerset, 31 in Hunterdon and 32 in Middlesex.
  • The number of new listings for condominiums and townhomes in Middlesex County dropped 27.5% from July 2024, 200 to 145.
  • The median sales price of adult community homes in Somerset County decreased 15.4% over July 2024 from $635,000 to $537,500.
  • The median sales price of adult community homes in Middlesex County increased 5.4% over July 2024 from $376,000 to $396,418.
  • The number of new listings in Hunterdon County in July fell 4.3% from 140 to 134 over July 2024.
  • The number of days a condominium or townhome was on the market was 30 days in Somerset County, 33 in Hunterdon, 36 in Middlesex and 41 in Union.
Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, New Jersey Real Estate | 65 Comments

Tale of two markets

From Parcl Labs:

Regional Divide as New Construction Cracks: August Motivated Seller Update

This summer Parcl Labs launched the Motivated Seller Index (MSI): a real-time, 0-10 metric scoring seller urgency based on days on market, price-cut frequency, cut velocity, and reduction size.

Our June research found Florida dominated seller urgency, with 14 of the top 20 most motivated markets in the Sunshine State.

This analysis expands on our June work by examining regional trends, market rankings, and property segment-level motivation. The story has evolved. Florida no longer stands alone.

The South is 20-30% More Motivated Than the Northeast

Regional bifurcation is here. As of late August 2025, home sellers across the South show meaningfully higher urgency than their Northeast counterparts.

The South Atlantic leads regional motivation rankings. MSI hits 4.17, 27% above New England’s 3.28. The rest of the South follows close behind, with East and West South Central both posting MSI above 4.0.

The West South Central region (Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana) shows the longest marketing times at 69 days and deepest price cuts at -3.0%, a new pressure point since our June analysis.

The West runs close behind Southern urgency. Pacific and Mountain regions both register MSI above 3.9, running 20%+ above Northeast levels.

Sellers still have leverage in the Northeast. New England anchors the bottom at 3.28 MSI, where listings clear in 54 days with minimal concessions. Middle Atlantic follows at 3.39.

Posted in Demographics, Economics, Housing Bubble, National Real Estate | 82 Comments