REAL ESTATE REALITY ZONE

The RE Reality Zone is a quick summary of key real estate market data available for you to get clarity on the market trends without getting lost in the noise of fake news, YouTube clickbait, or data overwhelm.

30 Second Summary

If you only have 30 seconds read this:

The RE market is fine. Buying activity is stable and normal. Inventory ticked down with vacations. It's seasonal. It’s well within the 80-100k new weekly listings we had pre-pandemic.

Interest rates are stable in the 6.7 range as well. But sales get slower in the summer.

The RE market is still stabilizing from the pandemic and post pandemic rate change. That threw the market completely awry and it takes awhile to figure out what we’re going to end up with.

That makes a “Crash” very unlikely. We also don’t have much distress in housing. We have more inventory because houses are harder to buy due to affordability. It’s not more sellers than normal, it’s less home-buyers.

Wages are increasing for people to afford current housing. I don’t mean through min wage increase, I mean through job growth by creating demand for products and services, and building more affordable housing with less regulation.

See below for the June jobs report, it’s incredibly good!

We need more houses. If the illegal immigrant deportation situation changes, that may affect housing. No one knows by how much.

Make your purchase and sale decisions based on the fact that the sales pace is increasing now.

Key Stats

If you have 2.5 more minutes see below:

(Stats from from Altos, Housingwire, Jason Hartman, and others)

Last week’s SFH Inventory on Market: 856,751

This week’s SFH Inventory on Market: 860,425

Pending Sales – 80,651 (1.4% lower than same week last year)

New listings – 90,699 (0.6% higher than same week last year)

This week’s price reductions are Higher than last year at 41.7% = High (normal is 30-35%).

(A leading indicator of buyer demand strength, and home price direction)

May’s on-market SFH Median Home Price: $423,700

June’s on-market SFH Median Home Price: $435,300 (1.97% higher than same month last year)

Last week's Median Price of Homes in Contracts: $459,000

This Week’s Median Price of Homes in Contracts: $455,663

Housing Vacancy Rate: 7.0% – very low (quarterly)

National vacancy rates in the second quarter 2025 were 7.0 percent for rental housing and 1.1 percent for homeowner housing. The rental vacancy rate decreased from 1.41 percent over the first quarter of 2025 and was slightly higher than in the second quarter of 2024 (6.06 percent). Source

United States Single Family Home Prices

Source: tradingeconomics.com

United States Total Housing Inventory

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Charts below updated on August 1, 2025

Policy Watch

– I hope to provide you with the commonly referenced, applicable financial data to see for yourself what effect government economic policy has on jobs, incomes, debt positions, and affordability for Americans, regardless of party.

— *** The jobs report is important. Please know when the gov puts out a report like "jobs", there is a revision done a month or so later, when they crunch the actual numbers. The press rarely reports the revisions, but that is the most accurate. I advise you to put less emphasis on the initial reports and look at the later revised reports for a more accurate view. They indicate part-time, full-time, native born and foreign-born, private sector and public sector job, those are categories that matter.

- April added 177k Jobs

- May added 139k jobs

- June added 147k jobs - 78 of 79 “experts” predicted less than 100k

CLICK THIS JUNE JOBS REPORT ←—-Click

Key takeaways:

- 830k new jobs native born

- 348k jobs lost for foreign born

- 437k GAIN of full-time jobs

- 367 LOSS of part-time jobs

- GAINS in private sector jobs, not just public sector

- Wages UP

The last 3 jobs reports were revised UP, not down. That means the reporting on jobs was even BETTER upon revision, not worse.

This is a 180 degree reversal of biden era job numbers where native born LOST 3 million jobs getting replaced by foreign born, multiple part-time jobs were replacing full-time, and virtually every report was revised significantly down. The numbers told the story.

- Inflation is stable, has not increased with tariffs as many claimed. What did increase was billions in revenue for the U.S. Example - Japan admitted they are absorbing costs in cars.

-The US owes 36 Trillion dollars in national debt, please hold our leaders accountable to reduce that number and be fiscally responsible. Yes, it means tough discussions on what should be cut. This high debt means interest rates have to be higher to sell the treasuries to other countries. Ideally the Fed can lower rates, you can see in the news there is a spat with Fed chair and Trump admin. The rates right now are costing America 100s of Billions in interest.

— The BRICS nations are going to have a hard time coming off the Dollar as the U.S. actions being taken to curb spending kick in to increase stability. They’re going to try, but the consensus is odds are low.

— Please say NO to Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) in any form (ie Fedcoin).

– Passive income from RE is a shield for most of this, whereas "flipping" and wholesaling can stop at any time.

**** We love “co-living” for amazing cash flow. Ask us about how we can help you retire with just 5 single-family houses.

Mortgage Applications & Rates

Because the current market relies HEAVILY on the CHANGE in mortgage rates, we’ve added this section.

Key Mortgage Stats:

30-Year Mortgage Rate: 6.72% as of July 31st, 2025 (previously 6.74%)

MBA Mortgage Applications: -3.80% as of July 30th 2025 (previously 0.80%)

The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage backed by Freddie Mac fell by a meager 2 bps from the previous week to 6.72% as of July 31st, holding above its lowest since April of 6.67% seen four weeks ago.

“The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage showed little movement, remaining within the same narrow range for the fourth consecutive week. Continued economic growth, along with moderating house prices and rising inventory, bodes well for buyers and sellers alike,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist.

Source: Trading Economics

Mortgage Application in the United States decreased by 3.80 percent in the week ending July 25 of 2025 over the previous week.

Mortgage Applications in the United States averaged 0.58 percent from 1990 until 2025, reaching an all time high of 112.10 percent in November of 2008 and a record low of -40.50 percent in January of 1993.

Source: Trading Economics

United States MBA 30-Yr Mortgage Rate


Source: Trading Economics

Delinquency & Foreclosures

Understand the leading indicator of borrower stress. (It will lag behind a few weeks before the data is reported)

ICE First Look at Mortgage Performance: Delinquencies Trend Slightly Higher in June as Foreclosure Activity Continues to Rise off Pandemic-Era Lows

  • The national delinquency rate rose by 15 basis points (bps) from May to 3.35% driven by early-stage delinquencies.

  • FHA delinquencies, which tend to experience more seasonality, rose by 41 bps in the month, hitting their highest June level since 2013, excluding the 2020-2021 pandemic-era impact.

  • Serious delinquencies (SDQs) – loans 90+ days past due but not in foreclosure – held steady but are up +8% (35K) YoY, with FHA loans now accounting for +51% of all SDQs nationwide.

  • Foreclosure activity continues to rise off pandemic-era lows with the share of loans in active foreclosure up +10% from the same time last year. Foreclosure starts and sales both rose YoY in each of the past four months.

  • Prepayment activity, measured in single month mortality, slipped by 6 bps to 0.65% on higher rates, although it remains up +22% from the same time last year.

For more information about gaining access to ICE’s loan-level database, please send an email to
[email protected]
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US Historical Foreclosure Activity and Rates

Population Growth

Top Ten Growing States

Top Ten Declining States

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