(from NationalMortgageNews.com)
Two big housing reports just dropped, one on foreclosures, one on mortgage delinquencies, and together they paint a picture of a market that isn’t crashing… but definitely feeling the pressure of high costs.
Foreclosures:
October marked the eighth straight month of increases. Total filings hit 36,000 (up 3% from September, 19% from last year). We’re still far below 2008-era peaks, but the trend is moving back toward pre-pandemic norms as homeowners face higher rates, insurance, taxes, and overall cost of living.
FHA-heavy states like Florida, South Carolina, Illinois, Delaware, and Nevada posted the worst foreclosure rates.
Delinquencies:
Mortgage delinquencies ticked up too, rising to 3.99% of all loans. The biggest trouble spot? FHA borrowers. The seriously delinquent FHA rate (90+ days late or in foreclosure) is up almost 50 basis points in a year, while conventional and VA loans stayed mostly flat.
Because rising foreclosures and delinquencies are a signal that affordability and borrower stress are building, and that makes the entire housing-finance chain riskier for lenders, agents and consumers alike. Even though it’s no 2008 all-over-again scenario, the pressure is mounting and staying alert now means making smarter moves later. Experts at the MBA, ICE, and Fitch all say the same thing: expect delinquencies to rise in 2026.
Read more here and here
Berkshire exits D.R. Horton, adds to Lennar
(from Housingwire.com)
Oh look! Berkshire Hathaway and Warren Buffett made it onto TWT two weeks in a row!
This time, the housing headline is simple but meaningful: Berkshire completely sold out of “America’s Largest Home Builder” D.R. Horton (~1.485M shares / ~$191.5M) and added more Lennar (~7.232M shares / ~$910M) in Q3 2025. Buffett didn’t “leave housing”… he reshaped his exposure.
Why? Because the 2025 market is “soft, incentive-heavy, and unforgiving of error.” With new-home inventory stuck above 9 months’ supply, builders using incentives at 5%+ of home value, and confidence staying in the low 30s, Berkshire is leaning toward the operator best built for a tougher 24–36 months.
Lennar has more “land optionality,” tighter systems, and has been quicker to manage pace, price, and incentives, including loads that climbed to 13% of home value in some communities. As the article puts it, the move isn’t “Horton bad, Lennar good,” it’s: “What wins now?”
So for those investors out there, Berkshire thinks Lennar is better positioned to handle a longer, choppier stretch, and that’s a signal for builders, lenders, and anyone watching where smart money sees stability.
Read more here
Social Space
Our Top Social Links of the week
Video:
“For legal reasons we can’t show the end of this listing video” – Watch here!
Video:
The future of real estate art is so cool – Watch here!
Read:
Even Worldstar is reporting on first time homebuyers – Read here!
Read:
“Our management team has over 1000 years of experience” – Read here!