Housing Market
The housing market is a crucial component of the U.S. economy, a fact that was evident to both the industry professionals associated with it and the wider public throughout 2022. Throughout the last year, the uptick in mortgage rates, coupled with other factors, like record-low inventory rates, has had a significant impact on all facets of the housing market. But, as industry professionals know, the housing market is cyclical, so we expect to see higher rates causing a downturn in buying demand. Conversely, lower interest rates increase consumer buying power and will typically drive an increase in home buying activity.
HousingWire housing market coverage lets you stay on top of the news that matters most and help to prepare you to navigate this unusual housing market. From pent-up demand in the market to expert forecasts for the 2023 housing market in 2023 and beyond, HousingWire has you covered.
The latest market trends
December 2022 — Housingwire lead analyst Logan Mohtashami noted that the next 12 months will be pivotal for the housing market, and we will likely see more rate hikes as the Fed continues to work to tame inflation. But according to Mohtashami, increasing supply is ultimately what is key to stabilizing the housing market and avoiding a recession:
“The following 12 months is what matters, and the best way to fight inflation is always adding more and more supply. If you’re trying to destroy inflation by killing demand by putting Americans into a job-loss recession — that isn’t the best long-term solution, you’re too late on the supply store.
We don’t need to create a job-loss recession to bring down inflation; we need more supply. In some parts of the economy, it takes too long to get that supply on, and some are much quicker.
However, with the mortgage rate hikes in place and knowing that the primary data line is lagging, we can hopefully assume that the Federal Reserve, which is a single-mandate Federal Reserve now and all about price stability, will move to a dual-mandate Federal Reserve. The dual mandate Fed is all about price stability and jobs. We need more time to get supply up, and we don’t need to overdo with rate hikes at this stage of the economic cycle.
We are still far from the Fed’s 2% inflationary target, but we don’t need to destroy the economy to get there. Since all six of my recession red flags are up, and I hope the growth rate cools down, mortgage rates can fall, which will stabilize the housing market, which in turn means the U.S. could avoid a recession near term.”
Latest Posts
The rental market has entered its infrastructure era
Feb 23, 2026The next housing transition will not be defined by who builds the most units.
It will be defined by who controls the rental workflow.
For years, the rental conversation has centered on demand. More renters. Longer tenures. Fewer paths to homeownership. That story is familiar and by now well understood by most real estate professionals.
-
Weekly pending home sales back to year-over-year growth as we head into spring
Feb 21, 2026 -
New home sales still at multiyear highs
Feb 20, 2026 -
Supreme Court overturns Trump’s tariffs in 6-3 decision
Feb 20, 2026 -
The hidden cost of move-in friction: Why the first 30 days can make or break resident loyalty
Feb 20, 2026 -
No exodus after all? Manhattan luxury market sales accelerate under Mamdani
Feb 19, 2026 -
Pending home sales fall as economic uncertainty remains
Feb 19, 2026 -
Mixed-density housing keeps expanding as affordability reaches a breaking point
Feb 19, 2026 -
Housing market update: Inventory rises, price cuts remain elevated as rates hold near 6%
Feb 18, 2026 -
Property tax burdens vary widely as states debate senior relief
Feb 17, 2026 -
How off-market deals and investor demand are reshaping residential real estate
Feb 16, 2026 -
Housing demand snaps back as mortgage rates near 6%
Feb 14, 2026