As if in a blast from the past, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) rose six points to 78 in August, the index’s highest reading since December 1998.
Source: Inman News
Builder confidence matches all-time high from ’98
More from AnalysisMore posts in Analysis »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- Northeast sees strongest price gains in Q3 as median single-family home price hits $426,800
- Heard of a K-shaped economy? You’re living in it now
More from builder confidenceMore posts in builder confidence »
More from coronavirus pandemicMore posts in coronavirus pandemic »
- Condo sales fall to 10-year low amid surge in insurance costs, HOA fees
- Meet Inman’s 2023 ‘Person of the Year’: The Small Broker-Owner
- The internet fell hard for real estate in 2021. But can the love affair last?
- Los Angeles apartment owners sue over COVID rent freeze
- Chris Heller: Brokerages and teams are playing chicken. Who will win?
More from DataMore posts in Data »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- What Zillow’s marketing genius can teach you about social media
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- Homebuyers came out in force last week, and rates are trending down
- October was another slow month for pending home sales
More from nahbMore posts in nahb »
More from nahb/wells fargo housing market indexMore posts in nahb/wells fargo housing market index »
More from new construction salesMore posts in new construction sales »
More from Robert DietzMore posts in Robert Dietz »
- 48% of Americans blame investors for ‘unreasonable’ housing costs
- Fannie Mae dials back sales expectations by 220K homes
- Builder sentiment plunges as hesitant buyers shift to sidelines
- Tariff threats prompt builders to pump brakes on new construction
- Rates have room to come down as economy cools: Fannie Mae
More from single family housing startsMore posts in single family housing starts »
Be First to Comment