Amid the current economic turmoil, including fears of a potential recession and recent significant stock market declines, real estate professionals must remain vigilant and adaptable, Victoria Kennedy writes.
Source: Inman News
Navigating economic turbulence to elevate your real estate career
More from 2024 economyMore posts in 2024 economy »
More from AgentMore posts in Agent »
- The death of old-school SEO, and what it means for real estate
- Forget private marketplaces, Colorado brokers launch full-transparency offensive
- 7 AI tips for real estate agents from a tech insider
- Zillow released its price forecast for hundreds of US markets. What will happen near you?
- Here’s why price cuts are sweeping the country
More from BrokerageMore posts in Brokerage »
- The death of old-school SEO, and what it means for real estate
- Forget private marketplaces, Colorado brokers launch full-transparency offensive
- Lesson Learned: Luxury isn’t price, it’s experience
- 7 AI tips for real estate agents from a tech insider
- Zillow released its price forecast for hundreds of US markets. What will happen near you?
More from economic downturnMore posts in economic downturn »
More from economic outlookMore posts in economic outlook »
- What the ballooning national debt means for housing
- NAR’s new member-only market tool tracks prices, demand, affordability
- Mortgage demand crumbles as rates are on the rise again
- 7 strategies to turn today’s bad economic news into more deals
- What the latest Fed survey data tells us about consumer psyches
More from economic uncertaintyMore posts in economic uncertainty »
- How the growing buyer power shift is reshaping the real estate market
- New listings grew 276% last week — but it’s not enough
- How industry infighting makes it harder for clients to achieve the American dream
- High-net-worths find safe harbor in real estate: Sotheby’s Realty
- New residential sales drop nearly 14% in May, their sharpest in 3 years
More from economyMore posts in economy »
- Should they stay or go (down) now? Forecasters are split on where mortgage rates will be in 2026
- What is the Federal Reserve, and how does it impact real estate?
- Fed signals it’s just getting started with 1/4 percentage point rate cut
- Homeowners rush to refinance as mortgage rates hit 2025 low
- Most Americans think mortgage rates and home prices have peaked
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
More from new agentMore posts in new agent »
- Why most real estate agents lose the deal after the 1st meeting
- Don’t just read the news. Be part of the story with Inman’s Tip Line
- FTC sues Zillow: A wake-up call for real estate agents and brokers
- Compass-Anywhere merger FAQ: How will it change real estate?
- 5 ways real estate agents can still win big in Q4
More from recessionMore posts in recession »
- Why is the Fed cutting interest rates — and what happens next?
- Will Gary Keller’s real estate recession prediction come true? The Download
- Gary Keller, Opendoor stock, one broker’s TikTok: Inman’s Top 5
- Smart financial planning tips to protect your real estate income
- Lower mortgage rates get a few more homebuyers off the fence
More from recession fearsMore posts in recession fears »
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- The death of old-school SEO, and what it means for real estate
- Credit bureaus slam plan to cut them out of FICO score pricing
- Forget private marketplaces, Colorado brokers launch full-transparency offensive
- Cloze’s MAIA is smart, task-driven and enterprise-ready: Tech Review
- Lesson Learned: Luxury isn’t price, it’s experience
More from serviceMore posts in service »
More from teamsMore posts in teams »
- The death of old-school SEO, and what it means for real estate
- 7 AI tips for real estate agents from a tech insider
- A mega-team goes indie, and other big-time real estate moves
- Don’t just read the news. Be part of the story with Inman’s Tip Line
- FTC sues Zillow: A wake-up call for real estate agents and brokers
More from Victoria KennedyMore posts in Victoria Kennedy »
Be First to Comment