Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "National Association of Realtors —"


3 mentions found


The red-hot US housing market could cool off slightly in 2025, making it easier to buy a home. There's both some good and bad news on the horizon for homebuyers, according to housing market experts. Another impediment to homeownership has been high mortgage rates, which have more than doubled in the last few years. And rates could come down further in 2025, according to housing market experts. AdvertisementIndeed, first-time homebuyers are having unprecedented difficulty in the housing market.
Persons: it's, homebuyers, Homeownership, it'll, Daryl Fairweather, Chen Zhao, Goldman Sachs, Jeffery Roach, Redfin, Fairweather, Zhao, haven't, Elijah de la, Gen, Edward Yardeni, they've, Gen Zers Organizations: Republican, LPL, National Association of Realtors —, Yardeni Research
Economic commentator Kyla Scanlon is noticing a potentially worrying trend in the investing outlook among younger generations. "But then you have the other side, which is an element to financial nihilism, where people don't want to save for retirement. They don't want to save money in general because they don't believe the future is there." Scanlon is aiming to bridge Gen Z's divided financial attitudes with her new book, "In This Economy? "The younger generation definitely wants [homeownership], because there's a lot of financial benefit to having equity," she said.
Persons: Kyla Scanlon, CNBC's, Scanlon, Gen Zers Organizations: National Association of Realtors
Housing prices, combined with the rise of remote work, threaten to end the middle-class dream of spending your final days in Florida. "It does put the retirement industry at risk because it's going to become more and more difficult" to retire in Florida, he told me. The political influence of Florida retirees is so significant that national publications send reporters to The Villages before elections to check its political pulse. The dream of a Florida retirement is dying as housing prices make it too expensive for most. And for people who are retiring now, the Florida retirement dream is starting to look a lot less sunny.
Total: 3