The U.S. isn't the only country recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, and it also isn't the only one seeing a historically volatile housing market on the brink of big change
The Fed's most recent mortgage rate hike is putting a damper on home sales, and in order to attract remaining buyers, sellers are increasingly slashing their asking prices
Local housing inventories are climbing in some of the nation's most in-demand metros and suburbs, signaling greater affordability and more opportunities for home purchases in the near future
Fast-rising inflation is putted increased financial pressure on Americans who are struggling to afford everything from gas to monthly mortgage payments
The current state of the nation's housing market may feel a bit unnerving to priced out buyers, but a recent report from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies also outlines a few key silver linings
While the Biden administration’s Housing Supply Action Plan pushes housing affordability to the top of the nation’s economic agenda, it lacks adequate supply chain solutions and fails to resolve other underlying challenges constraining housing produc