(from HousingWire)
President Trump officially nominated former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh to replace Jerome Powell as Fed Chair when Powell’s term ends in May.
On paper, this looks like a personnel change. In reality, markets immediately treated it like a potential shift in the rules of the game. The 10-Year Treasury yield moved higher on speculation that Warsh could take a different approach to interest rates, even before any confirmation hearings begin.
HousingWire Lead Analyst Logan Mohtashami summed up the uncertainty well, saying…
“The financial community could be puzzled because of Kevin Warsh’s past views on monetary policy, but I believe he has given up a lot of his old views and convinced Trump he would try to get rates as low as possible to get this position.”
Basically, investors aren’t sure which version of Warsh they’re getting yet.
Why this matters is simple. Mortgage rates don’t just respond to today’s Fed decision. They respond to expectations about who controls policy tomorrow. Think of it like weather forecasts. Even if it’s sunny now, people still cancel plans if a storm looks likely. Until markets know whether the Fed stays independent or becomes more politically pressured, rate volatility is likely to stick around.
That uncertainty alone can keep buyers cautious and lenders conservative, even without an actual rate change. – READ MORE HERE!
Builders Pitch “Trump Homes” as a Rent-to-Own Path to 1 Million New Houses (from National Mortgage News)
Homebuilders are floating a proposal informally dubbed “Trump Homes,” aimed at producing up to one million entry level houses using a rent-to-own model backed by private capital.
Companies like Lennar and Taylor Morrison have explored versions where families rent a newly built home and part of their monthly payment later counts toward a down payment.
At its core, this is an attempt to solve the affordability problem without waiting for rates to magically fall. Instead of asking buyers to clear every hurdle upfront, the model spreads the cost over time. Imagine moving into the house first, then finishing the financial paperwork later.
But rent-to-own has a checkered history. Private versions often fail because renters never reach the purchase stage or because property management falls apart. That’s why even supporters admit this would be complicated to implement. As one industry source put it, the plan shows builders’ desire to “gain the favor or avoid the ire of an unusually transactional White House.”
For housing professionals, the takeaway isn’t that this program is guaranteed, it’s that the industry is actively searching for new ownership pathways because the traditional model isn’t working for enough people anymore.
When builders start experimenting, it usually means pressure is real. And when private capital gets involved, the structure matters just as much as the intention. – READ MORE HERE!
Housing Affordability Is Starting to Hit Homeowners Too (from CNBC)
Housing stress isn’t just a buyer problem anymore.Mortgage delinquencies are rising, and while they’re nowhere near 2008 levels, the trend is moving in the wrong direction. As of the third quarter, about 1.78% of mortgages were delinquent, representing roughly 1.5 million households.
Economist Bandebo put it plainly:
“This is a considerably lower delinquency rate than the financial crisis, but it’s still a concerning sign that delinquencies are increasing.”
The reason isn’t hard to spot. Prices jumped more than 54% since 2020, insurance costs are up over 30%, property taxes keep climbing, and everyday expenses are still elevated.
One stat makes the math clear. Before the pandemic, a typical mortgage payment took about 21% of household income. Today, it’s over 30%. To get back to “normal,” one of three things would need to happen: rates fall to 2.65%, incomes rise 56%, or home prices drop 35%. None of those are easy, realistic, or quick.
Financial planner Thomas Blackburn offers the simplest advice:
“Just because a lender approves you for a certain amount doesn’t mean you should spend it.”
In other words, approval is a ceiling, not a comfort zone. This story matters because affordability doesn’t usually break all at once. It erodes quietly, bill by bill, until homeowners feel stretched instead of secure. – READ MORE HERE!
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