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“If the housing market were going to crash, it would have already crashed by now,” said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin. “The housing market has been so resilient to interest rates going up as high as they have.”Here are five housing market predictions for 2025, according to Fairweather and other economists. If fewer homes are built in a supply-constrained market, prices might grow much higher, said Channel. More than 21 million renter households are “cost-burdened,” meaning they spent more than 30% of their income on housing costs, according to 2023 U.S. Census data. “Rent prices typically decline in the colder months of the year,” as fewer people are apartment hunting in the late fall and winter seasons.
Persons: Redfin, , Daryl Fairweather, Fairweather, Selma Hepp, Donald Trump, Jacob Channel, ” Redfin’s Fairweather, , Hepp, CoreLogic, Donald Trump’s, ” Jessica Lautz, ” Fairweather, CoreLogic’s, “ We’ll, Redfin’s Fairweather, What’s, Milton Organizations: U.S, Redfin, LendingTree, , D.C, LendingTree’s, National Association of Realtors, CNBC, Locations: U.S, Austin , Texas, Seattle , Washington, New York City, Florida , California, Texas, California, Florida, Asheville , North Carolina
New York CNN —Losses from Hurricane Milton could reach as high as $34 billion, according to an early estimate of both flood and wind damage from research firm CoreLogic, with between $4 billion to $6 billion of those losses being uninsured flood damage. Most insured flood damage is covered by the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Homeowners who live in areas at high risk of flooding are often required by their mortgage lender to have flood insurance. The Milton losses will likely total far below CoreLogic’s estimated losses of up to $47.5 billion from Hurricane Helene, which came only two weeks before Milton. The lower end of the insured losses estimate from CoreLogic would be $17 billion, with $13 billion of wind damage covered by homeowners and business insurance , and $4 billion of insured flood losses.
Persons: Hurricane Milton, , Daniel Betten, Milton, , Tom Larsen, Hurricane Helene, Ike, Helene Organizations: New, New York CNN, tornados, National Flood Insurance, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Homeowners, Hurricane, Insurance Information Institute, Florida Gulf, Citizens Property Insurance Corp Locations: New York, Hurricane Milton, Florida, United States, Sarasota, Tampa, CoreLogic, Hurricane, Florida Gulf Coast
CNN —US home prices rose at the fastest clip in months to a fresh record high in January, according to data released Tuesday, highlighting how a housing shortage combined with high mortgage rates continues to limit affordability. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller US National Home Price index rose 6% in January from a year before, accelerating from a 5.6% annual increase in December. “On a seasonal adjusted basis, home prices have continued to break through previous all-time highs set last year,” he noted. On a month-over-month basis, prices rose 0.4% on a seasonally adjusted basis. Minneapolis home prices have declined 2.4% during the three months ended in January, according to the report.
Persons: , Brian Luke, Dow, Freddie Mac Organizations: CNN, , San Diego, Dow Jones, Minneapolis Locations: San Diego , Los Angeles, Washington
New York CNN —Sheila Bair, who had a front row seat to the subprime mortgage meltdown, is worried today’s housing market is unsustainably hot. A housing bubble can form when prices rise to unsustainable levels. “I see much less speculation in the housing market today, thank goodness,” said Bair. ‘Dizzying heights’Legendary investor Jeremy Grantham shares Bair’s concern about a housing bubble. In many ways, today’s housing market is the polar opposite of the one that preceded the Great Recession.
Persons: Sheila Bair, ” Bair, Bair, , she’s, there’s, Jeremy Grantham, ” Grantham, Goldman Sachs, Fannie Mae, Priscilla Almodovar, it’s, ” Almodovar, Lawrence Yun, homebuyers shouldn’t, ” Yun, Yun, America doesn’t Organizations: New, New York CNN, National Association of Realtors, CNN, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, NAR, , UBS Locations: New York, Los Angeles, San Diego, Richmond, Cincinnati, Zurich, Tokyo, Miami, Toronto, Vancouver, London, America,
Washington, DC CNN —Home prices rose again in June, marking the fifth successive month of gains, and remaining near the all-time highs notched a year ago. Prices rose 0.7% from the month before, according to seasonally adjusted data from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller US National Home Price Index released Tuesday. While home prices have remained strong in 2023, stubbornly high mortgage rates complicate the situation for potential homebuyers, said Selma Hepp, CoreLogic’s chief economist. Home prices in San Francisco were down 9.7% from a year ago and Seattle prices fell by 8.8%. “Many existing homeowners remain on the sidelines of the market, content to stay put as mortgage rates reach 20-year highs,” said Jones.
Persons: , Craig Lazzara, Selma Hepp, Hannah Jones, Freddie Mac, Jones Organizations: DC CNN, Realtor.com, ” Builders, Locations: Washington, , Midwest, New England, Cities, Chicago, Cleveland, New York, West, San Francisco, Seattle
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