Almost every day a journalist or an analyst asks me what will happen with house prices.
Every cycle is different, and usually I focus on inventory, sales, and months-of-supply to answer this question.
However, there have been significant policy changes this year, especially with trade and immigration. This has led to a period of rising inflation, and a weakening employment situation (rising unemployment rate). A period of stagflation.
These are powerful forces for the economy and housing.But what is the impact of rising unemployment?
The following graph shows the year-over-year in the Case-Shiller National Index versus the Sahm rule (from economist Claudia Sahm). The Sahm rule is a measure of changes in the unemployment rate. It compares the three-month moving average of the unemployment rate (U3) to the minimum of the three-month averages from the previous 12 months.
In general, a rising unemployment rate corresponds to weaker house prices. Of course, correlation does not imply causation. And there are exceptions - like at the onset of the pandemic when the unemployment increased sharply, but house prices took off (mortgage rates fell sharply and most potential homebuyers stayed employed).
https://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2025/09/what-will-happen-with-house-prices.html
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