Geek's Number Talk: Mortgage rates reach pre-pandemic highs

According to Freddie Mac, the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage hit 3.92% this week, a height that hasn’t been seen since May 2019. That’s up more than a full point from 2.81% one year ago. This means a rough housing market is about to get even rougher, as many first-time homebuyers have to fend off competition and negotiate a loan that doesn’t put them in debt for the rest of their lives. Learn more from the New York Times.

Geek's Number Talk: Low property taxes = Low inventory

According to a California Association of Realtors market report, people are staying in their homes longer than they used to. Why? Well, among the benefits of longtime homeownership in the Golden State are Proposition 13 protections against property tax hikes. Not to mention you’d have to move out of state to afford a new home!

Geek's Number Talk: Climate Market Impacts

Last year, the Union of Concerned Scientists issued a report called Underwater: Rising Seas, Chronic Floods, and the Implications for U.S. Coastal Real Estate. Under their worst-case scenario, rising global temperatures and loss of polar ice sheets will result in 1.8 feet of average sea level rise by the year 2045. That puts around 300,000 homes in the United States at risk. At this point, it’s no longer about prevention. It’s about stemming the tide. Read the report here.

Geek's Number Talk: Buying Power Outage

We all experienced the slow uptick of inflation and rising interest rates in 2021, but homebuyers may have felt the squeeze most acutely, losing an average of $25,000 in buying power, at least according to economists who crunch these numbers for a living. Learn more from our friends at The Balance.