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The Hidden Force Making Housing Impossible for Years

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Manage episode 484282781 series 2911349
Content provided by David Pelligrinelli. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Pelligrinelli or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, we explore a powerful but often overlooked force keeping the real estate market locked tight — and why even new inventory won’t fix it.

📌 Key Takeaways:

  • The real estate market is like a game of musical chairs — for someone to buy a home, someone else has to move out.
  • Even if new homes come on the market, demand still outweighs supply.
  • One semi-invisible but critical factor is holding the market in place: historically low interest rates.
  • Homeowners with 2–3% mortgage rates are effectively “locked in” and have no incentive to sell or move.
  • Moving from a 2% mortgage to 5% or higher creates a massive jump in monthly payments — even for a similarly priced house.
  • Most homeowners would have to downgrade to maintain the same payment, which very few are willing to do.
  • Going “up” in home size or price now means doubling monthly payments due to higher interest rates.
  • Many homeowners will choose to invest in upgrading their current home instead of buying a new one.
  • This mortgage “lock-in effect” dramatically reduces the number of homes available for resale.
  • Even if homeowners rent out their current home and buy a new one, it does not increase overall housing inventory — it simply shifts ownership.
  • Buyers coming from the rental market will bear the brunt of higher mortgage rates, but they aren’t impacting resale inventory.
  • The housing shortage may worsen, as fewer homeowners list their homes due to this invisible financial disincentive.

🏡 Final Insight:
The true crisis in real estate isn’t just about home prices or new construction — it’s about a mortgage-rate trap that keeps homes off the market. Until interest rates drop or new solutions are found, don’t expect a flood of available homes anytime soon.

  continue reading

1918 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 484282781 series 2911349
Content provided by David Pelligrinelli. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by David Pelligrinelli or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, we explore a powerful but often overlooked force keeping the real estate market locked tight — and why even new inventory won’t fix it.

📌 Key Takeaways:

  • The real estate market is like a game of musical chairs — for someone to buy a home, someone else has to move out.
  • Even if new homes come on the market, demand still outweighs supply.
  • One semi-invisible but critical factor is holding the market in place: historically low interest rates.
  • Homeowners with 2–3% mortgage rates are effectively “locked in” and have no incentive to sell or move.
  • Moving from a 2% mortgage to 5% or higher creates a massive jump in monthly payments — even for a similarly priced house.
  • Most homeowners would have to downgrade to maintain the same payment, which very few are willing to do.
  • Going “up” in home size or price now means doubling monthly payments due to higher interest rates.
  • Many homeowners will choose to invest in upgrading their current home instead of buying a new one.
  • This mortgage “lock-in effect” dramatically reduces the number of homes available for resale.
  • Even if homeowners rent out their current home and buy a new one, it does not increase overall housing inventory — it simply shifts ownership.
  • Buyers coming from the rental market will bear the brunt of higher mortgage rates, but they aren’t impacting resale inventory.
  • The housing shortage may worsen, as fewer homeowners list their homes due to this invisible financial disincentive.

🏡 Final Insight:
The true crisis in real estate isn’t just about home prices or new construction — it’s about a mortgage-rate trap that keeps homes off the market. Until interest rates drop or new solutions are found, don’t expect a flood of available homes anytime soon.

  continue reading

1918 episodes

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