Four years of housing market gridlock? Goldman Sachs issues U.S. home price predictions through 2026

housing market

In the summer of 2020, something counterintuitive occurred in the housing market. Despite the unemployment rate remaining in double digits, the market underwent a significant shift, transitioning into a boom. This surge was a direct result of the remote work trend, which generated a heightened demand for housing space. Notably, between the summer of 2020 and 2022, household formation exceeded expectations by 2.2 million, as individuals sought to separate from crowded roommate situations, and financially stimulated millennials embarked on independent living arrangements. The surge in housing demand during the pandemic was so substantial that Federal Reserve researchers estimated that housing supply would have needed to increase by a staggering 300% in order to match that elevated housing demand.

Clearly, housing supply never matched the surge in demand, leading to an overheating of U.S. home prices. From March 2020 to June 2022, the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index recorded a staggering increase of 43.3% in U.S. home prices. According to researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, more than 60% of these gains can be directly attributed to the heightened demand triggered by work-from-home policies.

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Source: finance.yahoo.com
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