Planning for the next several years in real estate transactions will require patience and a very different approach to the past decade of recovery economics driven by rate decreases.
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The 2020 recession was the shortest ever — but its effects continue in the housing market
Planning for the next several years in real estate transactions will require patience and a very different approach to the past decade of recovery economics driven by rate decreases.
In 2022, the number of consumer mortgage loans originated by DFPI licensees was down a shocking 70% from the prior year.
Mortgage loan availability fell in July 2023 to its lowest level in a decade for non-qualified mortgages (QMs).
Would-be renovators are finding themselves wedged between a rock and several hard places.
Sticky homeowners are unwilling to relieve the inventory shortage in 2023.
Media pundits in their coverage of today’s high mortgage interest rates ignore the 60-year cycle of rising and falling mortgage rates and the seller’s pricing response to rising and falling rates.
An overwhelming 95% of community bankers say the economy is already in a recession as of Q2 2023.
Any seller confidence gained during spring’s meager seasonal boost is premature.
2023 is seeing fewer independent brokers and more broker associates.
Year-to-date, sales volume is a fee-crushing 31% below 2022 as of June 2023.
In times of softening home prices, the sellers agent will need to be even more sure to provide the buyer with property reports and disclosures.
Today’s homebuyers remain undeterred by rising interest rates, still-high home prices and slowing sales.
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