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July 17, 2026 | U.S. Housing: It’s a Bust

John Rubino is a former Wall Street financial analyst and author or co-author of five books, including The Money Bubble: What to Do Before It Pops and Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom. He founded the popular financial website DollarCollapse.com in 2004, sold it in 2022, and now publishes John Rubino’s Substack newsletter.

My son is house-hunting in Tucson, AZ, and I’m watching with interest.

Right now, that housing market is a strange combination of prices that peaked at around twice 2018 levels and recent, sometimes notable price cuts. A couple of representative Zillow graphics:

It’s Nationwide

 

According to Wolf Richter’s Wolf Street, this isn’t a localized trend. It’s now nationwide.

Pending Home Sales Plunge to Near-Record Low in the Data, Hit Low in the West. Since then, Mortgage Rates Rose Further

Jul 16, 2026

Pending home sales plunged by 5.4% in June from May, seasonally adjusted, to the lowest level for any June on record, down 0.3% from the abysmally low levels in June last year, down 36% from June 2021, 37% from June 2020, 34% from June 2019, 32% from June 2018, and down 20% from June 2011, during the Housing Bust, according to data from the National Association of Realtors. Its data only goes back to mid-2010.

This is now the fourth year that demand has been in the deep-freeze, amid the highest supply of existing single-family homes in 10 years and of existing condos in 14 years.

What Would Unfreeze the Housing Market?

 

Lower mortgage rates would make houses more affordable, but that’s not happening. Rates doubled during the pandemic, and haven’t fallen much since.

Rising household formation would goose housing demand, but that’s also not happening. From a recent Fortune article:

49% of young adults live at home, up 12 points since 2019. An economist says the fallout will reshape marriage, kids, and home-buying

A new Federal Reserve survey offers a somber look at how young Americans are getting by: a lot with their parents’ help, from paying a phone bill to even living at home.

The data comes from the Fed’s Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households, which found that 49% of adults ages 18 to 29 live with their parents, and another 47% of adults in that same age group received help from someone outside their household to pay an expense—money toward a cell phone bill, general living expenses, or housing costs. Notably, those aren’t the same population, according to Laura Ullrich, director of economics at Indeed Hiring Lab, who has studied household formation trends for years.

“You’ve got to think about this as a Venn diagram,” Ullrich told Fortune. “Forty-nine percent of them are living at home. 47% of them are getting help from someone outside their household, which doesn’t include those living at home. There’s a lot of adult children getting financial support from their parents.”

When people stay at home longer or have roommates at older ages, it delays the ages at which they marry, have children, buy homes, and more. This demographic shift also impacts housing markets, school enrollment, and retirement ages.

The Inevitable Price of Inflation

 

It all comes back to fiat currencies: When a country piles up too much debt and responds by inflating away its money, life’s necessities are priced beyond the reach of a growing number of citizens. It’s not random chance, and it shouldn’t be a surprise. It’s just the inevitable result of this particular policy mistake.

As for my son, I’m advising him to make aggressively low bids while houses reprice back to 2020 levels.

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July 17th, 2026

Posted In: John Rubino Substack

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