
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The shift from rock-bottom interest rates early in the pandemic to mortgage rates eclipsing 8% has caused housing inventories to plummet and demand for new housing construction to increase. As the housing market reaches somewhat of a standstill from homeowners experiencing “mortgage lock,” rising house prices make first-time homeownership increasingly less affordable. While the housing market has so far weathered these changes without an industry-wide collapse, cyclical forces can always cause distress down the line. In this episode, we talk with Mark Palim, Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist with Fannie Mae, about how the housing market has adjusted to pandemic disruptions, the future for home sales and house prices, and the potential for any systemic risks.
5
1919 ratings
The shift from rock-bottom interest rates early in the pandemic to mortgage rates eclipsing 8% has caused housing inventories to plummet and demand for new housing construction to increase. As the housing market reaches somewhat of a standstill from homeowners experiencing “mortgage lock,” rising house prices make first-time homeownership increasingly less affordable. While the housing market has so far weathered these changes without an industry-wide collapse, cyclical forces can always cause distress down the line. In this episode, we talk with Mark Palim, Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist with Fannie Mae, about how the housing market has adjusted to pandemic disruptions, the future for home sales and house prices, and the potential for any systemic risks.
4,330 Listeners
1,714 Listeners
1,181 Listeners
2,820 Listeners
1,919 Listeners
1,999 Listeners
5,948 Listeners
77 Listeners
9,307 Listeners
1,550 Listeners
424 Listeners
296 Listeners
277 Listeners
43 Listeners
289 Listeners