News

"Housing will thus soon be a full-blown headwind to broader economic growth," warns Moody's Chief Economist Mark Zandi.
The housing market is a bellwether for the broader economy, and a key group of buyers has been slowly dwindling since 2010.
Americans aren’t happy with the rising mortgage rates and many say they’re not going to sell their homes because of it.
The US housing market is close to stalling out, with prices in more than half the country’s top 100 housing markets now below ...
U.S. home prices were still up 3.9% year over year in February — a slight dip from January’s 4.1% gain — but a growing supply ...
International investors are capitalizing on weak U.S. housing demand, with over half making cash purchases to avoid high ...
The average rate on a 30-year U.S. mortgage rose for the second week in a row, another setback for the U.S. housing market, ...
The South Carolina housing market is performing better compared to the U.S. overall, the latest data shows. Here are the ...
While New York’s bureaucracy administers the housing Hunger Games, Dallas’s skyline is dotted with cranes. Amid a surge in ...
No, the housing market is not even close to the housing market crash during the 2008 Great Recession, experts agree. That's in part because of new lending regulations resulting from the meltdown.
On today's episode of the 5 Things podcast: What once seemed like it was as hot as lava, the U.S. housing market now seems to be cooling down pretty quickly. But why? There seems to be enough ...
America’s housing market is finishing a year of high prices, sluggish sales and elevated mortgage rates. But there are factors that could give it a boost next year.