The housing market remains relatively healthy right now, but low affordability and lack of household formation are likely to impact it going forward, a study found. Which markets is affordability hurting the most?
Read More »Homes for Sale: Here Today, Gone Tomorrow
If there’s a home on the market stuffed with to-die-for features, it’s probably not going to last long, according to the latest Nationwide Health of Housing Markets (HoHM) ...
Read More »Persistent Housing Price Gains Hurting Affordability
House price gains continue to run at a pace well above the long-term average, according to a new report.
Read More »Obstacles Don’t Deter Optimism Toward Housing
The national U.S. housing market is sustainable, despite slower-than-expected household formations and the slowdown in energy sector jobs, according to a report.
Read More »Top 10 MSAs for Investors
New, healthy housing markets are emerging in the midst of further improvement of the real estate market overall. See which markets present the most opportunity for investors.
Read More »Employment Numbers Drive Housing Market Health
The housing market is still trekking down the recovery path, and although the market has not returned to its peak, it has made significant progress since crisis times.
Read More »Housing Market Displays Signs of Health; Suggests Sustainable Expansion in the Future
The majority of metro housing markets are showing signs of health, which will make for sustainable growth in the near-term, according to Nationwide's Health of Housing Markets Report.
Read More »Report: Housing Market is Healthiest Since 2001
According to data, none of the housing markets in the nation’s largest 40 metros are in negative territory, and only six of them are even neutral. The healthiest housing markets in the nation are in Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Philadelphia. Only two metros in the nation are in negative territory (Bismarck, North Dakota and Atlantic City, New Jersey), and even these are nearly in the neutral zone.
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