Housing follows the basic economic 101 fact that if demand is higher than supply, pricing will go up. The age chart reflects the Millennials are in their prime housing formation years. The aging population is staying put, and the average time of housing retention used to be 7 years, now it's 11. ... » Learn More about Why the Structural Elements of New Housing Construction and Age Demographics Feeds Into a Continuing Strong Real Estate Market
California Real Estate market
California, Los Angeles, San Fernando Valley Housing Statistics February 2022
As you can see in the attached charts, the real estate market still remains strong going into the Spring 2022 buying season. The only tricky part is what's going to happen with consumer confidence and the interest rates because of Geopolitical issues, high inflation, the Federal Reserve increasing ... » Learn More about California, Los Angeles, San Fernando Valley Housing Statistics February 2022
Fed Rate Increase – What Does It Mean For Mortgage Rates, Real Estate Market and Inflation?
The Federal Reserve did the widely predicted increase of the Fed Funds Rate from 0-.25% to .25-.5%. The ¼% isn’t a big deal, but the Fed Chairman Powell indicated that the target is 7 rate increases with a target of 1.9% by the end of 2022, and 2.8% in 2023-2024. The Q&A during the Chairman’s ... » Learn More about Fed Rate Increase – What Does It Mean For Mortgage Rates, Real Estate Market and Inflation?
San Fernando Valley Real Estate – It’s All About The Inventory
It seems that every week I receive a question on if we're going to have a crash in real estate values. My answer is always "it's about the basic economic reality of Supply and Demand". Interest rates can go up putting pressure on marginal buyers, but higher rates, higher values, isn't what you want ... » Learn More about San Fernando Valley Real Estate – It’s All About The Inventory
Mortgage Rates – Not Where They’ve Been, But Where Are They Going?
The big news is the CPI (Consumer Price Index) is now at 7.5%. Most in 40 years. The Federal Reserve is behind the curve on normalizing interest rates from their end. They are still tapering their Quanitative Easing (purchasing Mortgage-Backed Securities and Bonds) artificially keeping long rates ... » Learn More about Mortgage Rates – Not Where They’ve Been, But Where Are They Going?