
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Most discussed topics
Brands & references
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇮🇳IN · Daily News#1351K to 10K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
300 to 3K🎙 Daily cadence·378 episodes·Last published today - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
1K to 10K🇮🇳100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
400 to 4K
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
US Housing Market Faces Affordability Crisis Amid Rising Mortgage Rates and Policy Shifts
Jun 24, 2026
2m 50s
U.S. Housing Market Cools: Price Cuts, Rate Drops, and New Supply-Boosting Policy
Jun 23, 2026
3m 06s
US Housing Market 2026: Why Sales Rise But Affordability Falls
Jun 22, 2026
3m 12s
US Housing Market Cooling in 2026: Slower Sales, Flat Prices, Affordability Crisis Persists
Jun 19, 2026
3m 23s
US Housing Market Shows Signs of Recovery Despite High Mortgage Rates in 2026
Jun 18, 2026
4m 40s
Social Links & Contact
Official channels & resources
Official Website
Login
RSS Feed
Login
| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/24/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Faces Affordability Crisis Amid Rising Mortgage Rates and Policy Shifts | The US housing industry is navigating a fragile and uneven adjustment, marked by slightly improving activity but persistent affordability pressures and policy shifts. Over the past few weeks, mortgage rates have moved back up from levels below 6 percent earlier in the year, returning to the mid 6 percent range after renewed concerns about inflation and a more hawkish Federal Reserve stance. This has kept borrowing costs high and contributed to a weaker than expected spring selling season, with national home sales volumes still below typical pre pandemic levels, even as some sidelined buyers are slowly returning. Recent data show localized softness in prices. For example, in Austin, Texas, median home prices over the last three months were down about 2 percent year over year, while days on market stayed roughly flat, suggesting more price sensitivity rather than a collapse in demand. Builders nationally report modest pullbacks in new home sales, with average new home prices down around 5 percent compared with a year ago, as incentives and price cuts are used to attract rate fatigued buyers. A key development on the policy front is a new proposed rule from the Federal Housing Finance Agency, released in the Federal Register, to replace the existing Duty to Serve Underserved Markets framework for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This proposal signals a potential recalibration of how the government sponsored enterprises support affordable housing and manufactured housing, with industry stakeholders closely watching how new requirements may shift capital toward low income and rural markets. At the same time, public and nonprofit actors are stepping up preservation efforts. In one recent example, a 326 unit apartment community in White Oak, Maryland is being preserved as mixed income affordable housing through a roughly 79 million dollar acquisition, illustrating how mission driven capital is trying to counter rising rents and displacement risks. Compared with conditions reported earlier this year, when rates briefly dipped and hopes for a stronger spring rebound were higher, today’s market reflects more cautious buyers, more targeted discounts from builders, and mounting regulatory attention on affordability rather than on pure volume growth. Industry leaders are responding by emphasizing smaller, more attainable homes, down payment assistance partnerships with lenders, and acquisitions that preserve existing affordable stock, rather than betting on rapid price appreciation or speculative development. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 2m 50s | ||||||
| 6/23/26 | ![]() U.S. Housing Market Cools: Price Cuts, Rate Drops, and New Supply-Boosting Policy | The U.S. housing market is showing a mixed but slightly improving near term picture. In the past 48 hours, some local listings have seen price cuts, and one market update reported that 10 percent of listings reduced prices while mortgage rates eased from about 7 percent in June to roughly 6.35 percent, a shift that can improve monthly affordability for a $400,000 home by more than $200[1]. Fresh evidence from major market trackers still points to a market that is cooling from earlier highs rather than overheating. In New York, Redfin reports a median sale price of $876,000 over the last three months ending May 2026, up 3.0 percent year over year, while homes took 78 days to sell versus 67 a year earlier[3]. Austin looks softer, with a median sale price of $542,000, down 2.3 percent year over year[9]. That combination suggests buyers remain price sensitive, especially in higher cost markets, and sellers are responding with concessions and markdowns[1][3][9]. On the policy front, a major bipartisan housing bill passed the Senate this week and now moves to the House. The ROAD to Housing Act would cap institutional ownership of single family homes at 350 properties, expand preapproved home designs, streamline environmental reviews, support factory built housing, and create a $200 million annual Innovation Fund for five years[7]. That is the clearest regulatory shift in the week’s reporting and reflects growing political pressure to address the affordability gap and supply shortage[7]. Builders are also adjusting product strategy. Fortune reported that the average new U.S. home is now 2,175 square feet, down 5.6 percent from the 2019 peak, and that more than 80 percent of the top 50 housing markets have seen average home sizes shrink since 2019[5]. At the same time, median single family prices rose nearly 48 percent from 2019 to 2024, underscoring a squeeze in value for buyers[5]. To move inventory, builders are using rate buydowns, closing cost help, appliances, design credits, and even pools as incentives[5]. Overall, compared with earlier reporting, the market appears more balanced but still constrained by affordability, with slowing resale momentum, softer pricing in some Sun Belt markets, and a policy push aimed at boosting supply[1][3][7][9]. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 3m 06s | ||||||
| 6/22/26 | ![]() US Housing Market 2026: Why Sales Rise But Affordability Falls | The US housing industry is in a fragile but shifting phase, as lower mortgage rates meet stubbornly high prices and uneven local dynamics. Existing home sales in May 2026 were recently reported up about 3 percent month over month, helped by strong homeowner equity and slightly cheaper financing, but activity remains well below peak pandemic levels as many owners stay locked into older low-rate loans[3]. In the past week, industry executives have emphasized that the market still “is not working” efficiently, pointing to a combination of high listing prices, limited truly affordable inventory, and buyer fatigue, even as mortgage rates edge down from their 2024 highs[11][13]. iBuying and brokerage platforms are increasingly shifting from rapid-flip models toward fee-based services and partnerships as transaction volumes remain constrained[11]. Local markets show sharp contrasts. Northern Virginia continues to outperform national trends, with comparatively resilient demand despite national moderation in sales[9]. In Denver, agents report the highest supply in about twelve years, giving buyers more negotiating power, longer days on market, and modest price concessions compared with the tight conditions of 2021 to 2023[15]. At the same time, smaller markets like Mineral Wells, Texas, show median prices up over 20 percent year over year this spring, even as price per square foot slips and time on market shortens, reflecting investors and budget-conscious buyers pushing into secondary areas[7]. Affordability strains are intensifying at the lower end. In New York City, rent collections in affordable units fell from pre-pandemic norms above 95 percent to roughly 89 percent last year, and the share of deeply troubled projects, with collections below 80 percent, jumped to 11 percent in 2024, up from about 3 percent before[1]. Landlords face surging insurance and operating costs, while many tenants, shaped by pandemic-era protections, are slower to prioritize rent payments[1]. Nationally, a record 25 million young adults remain in or have returned to their childhood homes, reversing the post-2021 trend of forming new households as rents and home prices climbed[5]. This marks a clear behavioral shift from the rapid household formation that fueled the earlier pandemic housing boom. Compared with reports from late 2024, the current picture features slightly better sales, more localized oversupply, and deeper stress in affordable segments, with major players experimenting with new service models and partnerships to navigate a market that is slowly thawing but still structurally imbalanced. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 3m 12s | ||||||
| 6/19/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Cooling in 2026: Slower Sales, Flat Prices, Affordability Crisis Persists | The US housing market over the past 48 hours is defined by cooling momentum, rising leverage for buyers, and persistent affordability strain, rather than a sharp downturn. Nationally, days on market are longer than in the boom years, giving buyers more room to negotiate, while 30 year mortgage rates are holding near a relatively stable band around 6 percent, compared with the extreme volatility of the 2020 to 2023 period.[3] Bank of America’s recent analysis shows a median 70 days on market in February 2026, down seasonally from 78 in January but still above pre pandemic norms, underscoring a slower, more deliberate market.[3] Prices are flattening or edging down in several once hot metros. In Austin, Texas, the median sale price over the three months ending in May 2026 was about 542 thousand dollars, down 2.3 percent year over year, while homes are taking roughly 48 days to sell, similar to last year.[5] Sacramento remains competitive, with new listings up about 10 percent in May and the median price around 370 thousand dollars, up 1.4 percent month over month, signaling that demand is still solid in many mid priced markets.[7] At the same time, affordability pressures remain extreme at the high end. Zillow data highlighted this week show that the number of US cities where a typical starter home costs 1 million dollars or more has nearly tripled since before the pandemic, jumping from 80 in February 2020 to a record 242 today, even though the typical US starter home is still valued around 199 thousand dollars nationally.[1] Supply constraints and construction costs continue to shape consumer behavior. Recent research shared for Lexington indicates buyers are paying on average 183 thousand dollars more for new construction than for existing homes, pushing many toward older properties or smaller footprints.[11] In response, builders are leaning on incentives such as temporary rate buydowns and closing cost credits, while large lenders emphasize simpler, more transparent payment examples to keep hesitant buyers engaged.[3] Policy and nonprofit initiatives are stepping in where the market falls short. A new 910 thousand dollar Habitat for Humanity partnership in Wisconsin, announced this week, will help fund 20 single family homes and buy down costs for first time buyers, a small but concrete example of efforts to offset high prices and limited affordable inventory.[2] Compared with reporting from earlier in 2026, the current landscape shows a market that is cooler but not collapsing: prices in many regions are plateauing, buyers have somewhat more bargaining power, yet the long shadow of post pandemic price gains keeps homeownership out of reach for many would be buyers. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 3m 23s | ||||||
| 6/18/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Shows Signs of Recovery Despite High Mortgage Rates in 2026 | The US housing industry over the past 48 hours is balancing between a tentative recovery in activity and the drag of still high mortgage rates, with fresh data showing cautious but real momentum. According to recent May data, buyers are slowly adjusting to elevated borrowing costs. The average 30 year mortgage rate rose to about 6.4 percent in May 2026, the highest since late last year, yet demand is rebuilding as consumers accept that rates may stay higher for longer.[1] Pending home sales rose 3.8 percent month over month in May to an index level of 76.8, the fourth straight monthly gain and the strongest jump since 2024, beating expectations of less than 1 percent growth.[1][3] Year over year, pending sales are now up about 4 to 5 percent, and cumulative 2026 pending sales are roughly 2 percent above the same period in 2025, signaling a modest upturn.[1][3] At the same time, the market remains far below its pandemic era peak. Existing home sales are still down a little over 20 percent from earlier cycles, and the pending home sales index is about 40 percent under its high in 2020 and roughly 48 percent below the mid 2000s boom after adjusting for population growth.[1] The lock in effect is still powerful, with nearly 9 in 10 mortgage borrowers holding loans below 6 percent, which continues to constrain resale inventory and push more demand toward new construction and build to rent communities.[3] On the development side, builders and institutional owners are doubling down on rental and build to rent product. A new 216 home build to rent community just opened pre leasing with fresh construction financing, while major operators like ResiHome and McKinley Homes have announced new partnerships focused on Sun Belt markets where the build to rent pipeline is heaviest.[8] Affordable housing developers are also experimenting with innovative capital stacks, exemplified by a recently announced 103 million dollar bond financing to renovate and preserve existing communities at scale.[2] Consumers are responding to high prices and rates by widening their home search to secondary metros and suburban submarkets, shifting from ownership to renting, and showing greater price sensitivity. Real time local data from brokers show active listings up around 9 percent in some markets, even as pending sales run a few percent below last year, suggesting buyers remain choosy and quick to walk away from overpriced homes.[7] Regional snapshots highlight this mixed picture: in Austin, Texas, the median sale price over the last three months was about 542,000 dollars, down just over 2 percent from a year earlier, while days on market have held roughly flat near 48 days, indicating a market that is cooler but still moving.[9] In contrast, midwestern states like Ohio are seeing rising prices, more inventory, and increased sales, pointing to a competitive but healthier balance between buyers and sellers.[11] Compared with reporting earlier this year, conditions now show a clearer path toward stabilization rather than free fall. Earlier months were dominated by falling transactions and extreme rate shock; now, multiple months of improving pending sales indicate that some pent up demand is finally emerging despite financing headwinds.[1][3] Industry leaders are responding with rate buydown incentives, more flexible product types, and partnerships that blend private capital with public subsidies, especially in affordable and workforce housing.[2][6] However, the sector remains highly sensitive to any future shift in long term interest rates and to ongoing shortages of both for sale and rental supply, which continue to underpin elevated prices despite pockets of regional softness.[1][5][9] For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 4m 40s | ||||||
| 6/17/26 | ![]() Housing Market Mid-2026: Buyer Power Rises as Construction Slows and Rates Await Cuts | The US housing industry is entering mid 2026 in a mixed but slightly improving position, with fresh data from the last week showing buyers gaining a bit of ground even as construction cools. According to the June 2026 ICE Mortgage Monitor, home shoppers now have about 3 percent more purchasing power than a year ago, despite mortgage rates that remain elevated. The monthly payment on an average priced home in May was 48 dollars lower than a year earlier, and the share of median household income needed to buy that home fell from 31.6 percent to 29.8 percent. Nearly 70 percent of major housing markets posted year over year price gains in May, the highest share since mid 2025, confirming that prices are rising again rather than correcting. At the same time, supply side data over the past few days point to a slowdown in new building. Recent reports highlight that housing starts in May fell more than 15 percent, signaling that builders are pulling back on new projects as financing costs, labor tightness, and uncertainty about future demand weigh on confidence. Some market analysts now argue that rising competition from new home builders using aggressive incentives is reshaping the market, forcing existing home sellers to trim prices or offer concessions. On the demand side, consumer behavior has shifted from the frenzy of 2021 toward price sensitivity and careful budgeting. Buyers are stretching less, responding to slightly lower payments and hoping that expected Federal Reserve rate cuts later this year will improve affordability further. National Realtor commentary this week emphasizes that two to three rate cuts are anticipated, which would likely unlock additional demand and some pent up listings as move up sellers regain confidence. Industry leaders are responding with targeted strategies rather than broad expansion. Large builders are focusing on smaller, more affordable product, pairing price cuts with rate buydowns instead of headline price increases. Lenders are rolling out more down payment assistance and closing cost credits to convert cautious shoppers into buyers, while institutional landlords continue to expand in select markets where rent growth outpaces ownership costs. Compared with late 2025, when both prices and payments were climbing together, today’s environment is characterized by moderate price appreciation, slightly easing payment burdens, and a visible cooling in construction activity that could keep inventory tight later this year. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 2m 58s | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Mid 2026: Sales Bounce Back But Affordability Pressures Return | The US housing industry is entering mid 2026 in a fragile, mixed position: sales volumes have recently improved from 2023 lows, but fresh data over the past week show momentum stalling again as mortgage rates and costs edge higher and buyer affordability remains stretched. Recent market data indicate a split picture. Redfin reports that total US home sales in May, including new and existing homes, rose about 3 to 4 percent month over month to the highest level since October 2022, helped by mortgage rates that briefly dipped into the low 6 percent range in April and a modest rise in listings that gave buyers more choice and negotiating power.[1] The median US home sale price in May was just under 400,000 dollars, up roughly 2 percent year over year, even as nearly 60 percent of homes still sold below original list price, signaling a cooler, more negotiable market than during the pandemic boom.[1] However, new sentiment and forward looking indicators released in the past 48 hours point to renewed strain. The National Association of Home Builders June survey shows builder confidence falling again, with the NAHB Housing Market Index at 35, marking its fourteenth straight month below 40, the longest weak stretch since the foreclosure era.[5] Builders cite elevated mortgage rates, rising construction material costs, and ongoing affordability challenges. About 35 percent of builders report cutting prices, with average reductions around 6 percent, and roughly 62 percent are using sales incentives such as buydowns and closing credits to move inventory.[5] This is a notable escalation in discounting compared with earlier this year and underscores how leverage is shifting back toward buyers. Supply and demand are slowly rebalancing. Days on market remain well above pre pandemic norms, near 70 days as of late winter, even as they eased somewhat seasonally, and mortgage rates are oscillating around 6 percent on a 30 year fixed loan.[3] Inventory has improved from the extreme scarcity of 2021 and 2022, with total homes for sale recently hitting their highest level since 2020, yet overall supply is still not enough to meet long run household formation, particularly in affordable segments.[1] Capital markets and partnerships are adjusting to these realities. In the past week, PGIM Real Estate and Domain Real Estate Partners announced they have surpassed 4 billion dollars in US land banking transactions, providing flexible, non bank capital to major homebuilders at a time when traditional credit conditions are tightening.[2] This type of structure allows builders to control lots and continue pipeline development without carrying as much land on balance sheet, a key strategy as sales slow and financing becomes more restrictive. Industry consultants and lenders are also emphasizing temporary rate buydowns and clearer payment illustrations as tools to keep hesitant buyers engaged while rates stay elevated.[3] Regionally, conditions are diverging. Realtor dot com’s 2026 state housing report card shows Midwestern and Southern states leading on combined measures of affordability and new construction, with Indiana now ranked number one and many coastal states, including New York, earning failing grades due to poor affordability and limited building.[11] This continues a multiyear shift toward the Midwest and Sun Belt that began during the pandemic but is now being reinforced by relative price advantages and more available land. Compared with earlier reporting from late 2025 and early 2026, the current landscape features slightly more inventory, somewhat better buyer negotiating power, and modestly improved sales volumes, but no return to the rapid price gains or ultra tight supply of the boom years. Builders and lenders are leaning more heavily on incentives, alternative capital, and geographic diversification to navigate what remains an affordability constrained, rate sensitive, and regionally uneven US housing market. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 4m 30s | ||||||
| 6/15/26 | ![]() U.S. Housing Market Cools: Mortgage Rates Rise, Home Prices Fall in 2024 | In the past 48 hours, the U.S. housing market has shown a mix of cooling prices, still-elevated financing costs, and continued stress on affordability. Fresh data reported in the last week shows the average 30 year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.52 percent on June 11, its third increase in four weeks, which is keeping monthly payments high even as some home prices soften[7]. At the same time, Redfin data cited this week says the median listing price of existing U.S. homes fell 2.4 percent year over year in May to 429,500 dollars, the largest annual decline reported since at least 2017, while prices also fell in 35 of the 50 largest metros[1]. The clearest market signal is that buyers remain cautious and sellers are starting to concede on price. Redfin reported a 3,000 dollar weekly drop in the median U.S. home price to 416,623 dollars, the first decline so far this year[1]. That lines up with broader reports that demand is weakening because mortgage rates and inflation are squeezing affordability[1][7]. Compared with earlier reporting that described persistent shortages and strong competition, the current tone is more balanced and in some markets distinctly softer[9]. Industry responses are increasingly focused on partnerships and affordability programs. In Maine, state leaders extended the Affordable Housing Tax Credit in April to help finance and preserve hundreds of homes, underscoring how public and private collaboration is being used to offset tight supply[2]. Habitat for Humanity partners are also highlighting corporate support, including long running backing from Wells Fargo in Denver, as builders and nonprofits try to keep entry level housing moving despite higher costs[4]. Consumer behavior is shifting toward delay, renovation, and selective buying rather than aggressive bidding. Reports this week suggest many households are choosing to improve existing homes instead of moving, a sign that current rates and prices are discouraging trade ups[9]. Regional data also show uneven conditions: Charlotte, for example, still posted a 2.3 percent annual price gain over the last three months, but homes took longer to sell than a year ago, suggesting slower momentum even in healthier markets[3]. Overall, the U.S. housing sector is now being shaped less by runaway demand and more by affordability pressure, slower sales, and targeted policy and nonprofit responses[1][2][7]. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ | 3m 05s | ||||||
| 6/12/26 | ![]() Housing Market Shifts: Higher Rates, Better Inventory, and Growing Buyer Power in 2024✨ | housing marketmortgage rates+3 | — | Federal Reserve | ColoradoAustin, Texas | housing marketmortgage rates+3 | — | 3m 13s | |
| 6/11/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Shifts Toward Buyers as Prices Cool and Inventory Rises in 2026✨ | US housing marketbuyer power+4 | — | — | USAustin, Texas | housing marketbuyers+5 | — | 4m 19s | |
| 6/10/26 | ![]() U.S. Housing Market Shows Signs of Thaw But Affordability Remains Key Barrier in 2024✨ | U.S. housing marketaffordability+4 | — | Bank of America | U.S.Austin | housing marketaffordability+5 | — | 2m 17s | |
| 6/9/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Shifts to Buyer Power as Inventory Rises and Sales Slow in 2026✨ | US housing marketbuyer power+4 | — | — | USSt Louis+1 | housing marketbuyer power+5 | — | 2m 54s | |
| 6/8/26 | ![]() US Housing in 2026: Why Mortgage Rates Still Matter More Than Ever✨ | US housing marketmortgage rates+4 | — | Freddie MacFederal Reserve Bank of St. Louis+1 | — | mortgage rateshousing market+5 | — | 3m 32s | |
| 6/5/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Shifts: Lower Rates, Softer Prices, and the Return to Affordability✨ | US housing marketmortgage rates+3 | — | — | USAtlanta+2 | housing marketmortgage rates+6 | — | 3m 26s | |
| 6/4/26 | ![]() Spring Housing Market Fizzles: Slower Sales, Longer Days on Market, and Weak Price Growth in 2026✨ | housing marketreal estate trends+4 | — | — | US | housing marketmortgage rates+5 | — | 2m 51s | |
| 6/3/26 | ![]() Housing Market 2024: Affordability Gains, High Rates, and Buyer Caution Reshape Real Estate✨ | housing marketaffordability+3 | — | National Association of Realtors | West Chester, PennsylvaniaU.S. | housing marketaffordability+3 | — | 2m 26s | |
| 5/21/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Cools as Mortgage Rates Hit 9-Month Highs, Buyers Show Caution✨ | US housing marketmortgage rates+3 | — | Mortgage News Daily | USMobile County, Alabama+5 | housing marketmortgage rates+5 | — | 2m 46s | |
| 5/20/26 | ![]() U.S. Housing Market Shows Resilience With Mixed Signals and Buyer Leverage✨ | U.S. housing marketmortgage demand+4 | — | DallasHousingWire+1 | U.S.Texas+1 | housing marketmortgage demand+5 | — | 2m 31s | |
| 5/4/26 | ![]() Housing Market Collapse 2026: Mortgage Rates Spike, Home Sales Plunge, Buyer Demand Crashes✨ | housing marketmortgage rates+4 | — | GallupBank of America | USSouthwest Florida | housing market collapsemortgage rates spike+8 | — | 2m 03s | |
| 5/1/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Shows Resilience: Prices Fall, Inventory Rises, Rates Hit 6.30 Percent✨ | US housing marketmortgage rates+3 | — | Coldwell Banker | PhoenixNortheast+1 | housing marketmortgage rates+3 | — | 2m 03s | |
| 4/30/26 | ![]() Housing Market Split: Sun Belt Glut vs Northeast Shortage Reshapes 2024 Spring Real Estate✨ | housing marketreal estate trends+4 | — | — | Sun BeltNortheast+11 | housing marketSun Belt+7 | — | 3m 33s | |
| 4/29/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Splits: Sun Belt Glut vs Northeast Shortage, What It Means for Buyers✨ | US housing marketregional differences+3 | — | — | USSun Belt+11 | housing marketSun Belt+5 | — | 3m 10s | |
| 4/28/26 | ![]() Sun Belt Housing Surge: Markets Split as Inventory Surges and Prices Drop in 2026✨ | housing marketSun Belt+4 | — | — | Sun BeltWest+11 | housing marketSun Belt+5 | — | 2m 54s | |
| 4/27/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Splits: Sun Belt Inventory Surge vs Northeast Shortage Crisis✨ | US housing marketinventory trends+4 | — | ZillowOptimal Blue | USSun Belt+13 | housing marketSun Belt+7 | — | 2m 37s | |
| 4/24/26 | ![]() US Housing Market Stabilizes as Rates Hold Steady and Inventory Climbs in 2026✨ | US housing marketmortgage rates+4 | — | Freddie MacZillow+2 | Iran | housing marketmortgage rates+5 | — | 2m 20s | |
Showing 25 of 400
Sponsor Intelligence
Sign in to see which brands sponsor this podcast, their ad offers, and promo codes.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.

