Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月15日
Top real-estate CEO suggests some young people might have voted for Trump because they’re sick of living in their parents’ basements
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文章探讨了特朗普连任对美国住房市场可能产生的影响。在疫情期间,房价飙升,抵押贷款利率下降,但通货膨胀和利率上升导致市场陷入停滞。作者认为,特朗普可能通过放松住房建设的监管来刺激住房建设,从而缓解住房短缺问题。文章还指出,特朗普的政策可能导致抵押贷款利率上升,房价持续上涨。此外,文章也提到了住房市场供需失衡、房价难以下降等问题。

🏡特朗普连任后,可能通过放松住房建设监管,例如放宽环境审查和公寓楼建设限制,来刺激住房建设,缓解住房短缺问题。

📈特朗普政策可能导致抵押贷款利率上升,因为其政策可能导致更高的关税和消费者价格,进而影响抵押贷款利率。

🏠美国住房市场面临供需失衡,房屋短缺导致房价难以下降,30年期固定抵押贷款也使得房价保持高位。

🤔特朗普政府对住房政策的态度存在不确定性,既可能放松监管,也可能加强监管,例如对非法移民的政策。

📈房价在近期几乎从未下降,只有在90年代初的短暂衰退和2000年代初的金融危机期间有所下降。

“The young voters who, after years living in their parents’ basement, swung right in this election, will expect President Trump to act as America’s real estate developer in chief, and build the housing that they need,” Redfin chief executive Glenn Kelman wrote Wednesday in a note titled: “Way-Too-Early Take: What Trump’s Re-Election Could Mean for Housing.”In a prior interview, Kelman told me, “Biden’s basic problem with millennials is how optimistic can you be about the economy from your parents’ basement?” That was, of course, before President Joe Biden dropped out of this year’s race, before Vice President Kamala Harris became the Democratic Party’s candidate, and before Trump won it all. Home prices soared during the pandemic because people could work and live from anywhere, and mortgage rates were lower than they’d ever been. When inflation became a real hot problem, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates, indirectly lifting mortgage rates. Americans were left with high home prices and high mortgage rates—and still are, to an extent. Some people can’t buy homes, and others won’t sell them and lose their low mortgage rate: That’s why sales are depressed. Also, after years of underbuilding—and in some cases, decades of policy failure—there aren’t enough homes to go around. But Trump can maybe fix that, according to Kelman, by “setting aside well-meaning regulations on home-building that limit construction and make housing less affordable,” he said, partly referring to “environmental reviews in already well-settled areas, and limits on apartment buildings in neighborhoods of single-family homes.”It isn’t up to the federal government, though; it’s all up to states and localities, who pretty much control development via land-use regulations, but Trump could create incentives for them to get housing built. “Many of America’s problems are hard to solve, but this one isn’t, especially for a president who loves construction,” Kelman said. Trump was once a real-estate scion, after all.  So far, in the week since the former president has become the president-elect, demand in the housing world has leaped by one measure: Demand from home-buyers requesting service through Redfin’s site was about 25% higher this weekend than the same weekend last year, the largest year-over-year jump since things started to go south two years ago. “Some buyers are undoubtedly enthusiastic about a Trump economy; others may have been waiting to make major decisions until after the election,” Kelman said. Mortgage rates, which had been falling for a bit on chatter of a Fed cut, rose in anticipation of another Trump presidency. Before the election, two prominent economists told me the “Trump trade” was sending mortgage rates soaring. Kelman echoed that in his note, saying higher tariffs, and therefore higher consumer prices associated with Trump, were being priced in. Mortgage rates higher than what people had become accustomed to pushed the housing market to a standstill, one that saw existing home sales fall to their lowest point in almost three decades last year—and potentially another historical low this year. On the other hand, it is way too early to tell if demand is better under Trump 2.0 as mortgage rates are still elevated. But the “bizarre pairing could set up a major challenge for a president elected to beat inflation,” he said. It seems home prices would only continue to rise, as they have done, even if it’s at a slower pace. Fed chair Jerome Powell has already admitted that housing is not something the central bank can fix.Home prices almost never fall. You can only pinpoint two eras in our recent history when home prices declined: a short-lived recession in the early 90s, and the Great Financial Crisis of the early 2000s, as I previously wrote. This time around, we’re missing millions of homes, and that’s keeping prices from dropping—not to mention, our 30-year fixed mortgage keeps everyone with a low interest rate locked-in, exacerbating our very prevalent supply problem and, again, keeping prices high. We’ll see what another Trump presidency means for the housing world soon. In the meantime, we know his housing policy revolves around mass deportation of illegal immigrants and either deregulation or more regulation (he has hinted at both on different occasions). How many degrees of separation are you from the globe's most powerful business leaders? Explore who made our brand-new list of the 100 Most Powerful People in Business. Plus, learn about the metrics we used to make it.

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特朗普 住房市场 房价 抵押贷款 住房政策
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