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Spring Housing Market at Crossroads: Rising Mortgage Rates and Geopolitical Uncertainty Challenge 2026 Buyers
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
Description
The US housing market remains fragile as of March 17, 2026, with mortgage rates climbing to 6.36% on 30-year fixed loans, up from a multiyear low of 6% in January, driven by the Iran conflict surging oil prices above $100 per barrel and inflating gas and goods costs.[1] This reversal threatens the spring buying season, dimming hopes for Federal Reserve rate cuts amid rising inflation fears.[1]
Pending home sales edged up 1.8% month-over-month in February, led by Midwest gains of 4.6%, South at 2.7%, and West increases, though down 0.8% year-over-year overall; Northeast sales fell 3.6% monthly and 12.1% annually due to high prices and low supply.[2][6] Existing-home sales rose 1.7% in February from January, with first-time buyers at 34% of transactions, up from 31% last year, and inventory up 2.4% monthly.[4] Median existing-home price hit $398,000, a mere 0.3% YoY rise, signaling moderation.[4]
Rents provided relief, with national median asking rent at $1,667 for 0-2 bedroom units, down 1.7% YoY and 5.1% from 2022 peaks; Austin saw an 18.2% drop from its high.[3] Western regions showed strongest sales momentum at 8.2% MoM, tied to affordability gains.[4]
Compared to early 2026 optimism when sub-6% rates spurred applications, current geopolitical tumult has introduced uncertainty, higher construction costs from labor shortages, tariffs, and AI data-center competition.[1] NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun warns oil-driven rate hikes could undo affordability.[2] Home Builders Institute CEO Ed Brady notes industry focus on short-term resolution for confidence.[1] Supply deficits persist, with new builds often suburban amid return-to-office trends and elevated fuel prices.[1] Consumer caution prevails, but modest sales upticks hint at resilience if disruptions ease. (298 words)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Pending home sales edged up 1.8% month-over-month in February, led by Midwest gains of 4.6%, South at 2.7%, and West increases, though down 0.8% year-over-year overall; Northeast sales fell 3.6% monthly and 12.1% annually due to high prices and low supply.[2][6] Existing-home sales rose 1.7% in February from January, with first-time buyers at 34% of transactions, up from 31% last year, and inventory up 2.4% monthly.[4] Median existing-home price hit $398,000, a mere 0.3% YoY rise, signaling moderation.[4]
Rents provided relief, with national median asking rent at $1,667 for 0-2 bedroom units, down 1.7% YoY and 5.1% from 2022 peaks; Austin saw an 18.2% drop from its high.[3] Western regions showed strongest sales momentum at 8.2% MoM, tied to affordability gains.[4]
Compared to early 2026 optimism when sub-6% rates spurred applications, current geopolitical tumult has introduced uncertainty, higher construction costs from labor shortages, tariffs, and AI data-center competition.[1] NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun warns oil-driven rate hikes could undo affordability.[2] Home Builders Institute CEO Ed Brady notes industry focus on short-term resolution for confidence.[1] Supply deficits persist, with new builds often suburban amid return-to-office trends and elevated fuel prices.[1] Consumer caution prevails, but modest sales upticks hint at resilience if disruptions ease. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI