Three Data Signals Pointing To Stable Real Estate Returns
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The housing market doesn’t need a boom to be investable. What it needs is health: steady price behavior, sane negotiations, and data you can actually underwrite against without guessing what will break next week. That’s what we’re seeing right now, and I walk through three clear signals that point to a more stable and predictable real estate market for the second half of the year.
First, we unpack momentum. Price growth is accelerating for the first time in two years, but it’s doing so in a restrained way, moving from about 0.6% annual growth to roughly 0.8%, with stronger short-term momentum underneath. That’s not a frenzy. It’s a market quietly regaining its footing, which is often where disciplined investors can make clearer decisions without paying “panic premiums.”
Next, we talk balance and why inventory matters. National supply has climbed to around four and a half months, a healthier level than the extreme shortage era. That shift brings back normal negotiation, normal inspections, and normal timelines, the kind of conditions that support stable outcomes. We also cover convergence: the gap between the strongest and weakest regional markets is shrinking, creating a more synchronized national picture that can make underwriting real estate decisions easier across the board.
Mortgage rates are still expected to stay in the mid-6% range, and we’re not banking on a return to ultra-low rates. So the takeaway is simple: when the market isn’t booming and isn’t crashing, structured, defined returns and collateral-backed strategies can shine. If you want a deeper look at how secured real estate lending is designed for this kind of environment, listen through to the end, then subscribe, share this with a friend who follows housing data, and leave a review.