Zillow Market Pulse: June 4, 2020
Purchase mortgage applications continued a stunning recovery. And two separate reads of labor market and service-sector "strength" have strings attached.
Zillow Market Pulse: June 4, 2020
Purchase mortgage applications continued a stunning recovery. And two separate reads of labor market and service-sector "strength" have strings attached.
Zillow Market Pulse: June 3, 2020
Purchase mortgage applications continued a stunning recovery. And two separate reads of labor market and service-sector "strength" have strings attached.
Mortgage Rates Rise on Stronger-than-Expected Economic Data
Mortgage rates rose just slightly on the week, noticeably in the last couple days as key economic reports exceeded consensus expectations.
Zillow Market Pulse: June 2, 2020
Homebuilders have reason to be confident. Skyrocketing saving is creating uncertainty. And federal assistance may not be working for public companies.
Zillow Market Pulse: June 1, 2020
May's decline in construction spending wasn't as bad as feared. Homebuilders aren't rushing to offer deal sweeteners. And manufacturing may have hit bottom.
Zillow Weekly Market Report: Data Through May 23, 2020
This week brought more evidence of buyers and sellers returning to the market as newly pending sales and new listings are up from the previous week.
Zillow Market Pulse: May 29, 2020
Consumer spending was way down in April, and saving was way up. Consumers are bracing for a long road ahead. And a wave of corporate defaults looms.
More Than 8 Million U.S. Workers Live in Cities, But Don’t Work There
Asking if work-from-home will push migration to the suburbs ignores millions of workers living in cities not because of proximity to work, but despite it.
Zillow Market Pulse: May 28, 2020
Pending home sales cratered in April, the U.S. notched another week of 1 million-plus unemployment claims and GDP fell by more than first thought.
Zillow Market Pulse: May 27, 2020
Purchase mortgage applications are higher than they were a year ago, and the share of mortgages in forbearance keeps rising -- but more slowly.