The US housing market is sending some interesting signals. High-rate mortgages—anything above 6%—now account for 21.2% of all new loans. That's the highest we've seen since 2015. Pretty wild when you think about it: this share has nearly tripled in just two years since 2022. Meanwhile, the other end of the spectrum tells an equally telling story. Those sub-3% rate mortgages that dominated the market? They've cratered, dropping 4.4 percentage points to 20.2%. What does this mean? The mortgage landscape has fundamentally shifted. Borrowing costs have become a serious constraint, and it's reshaping how people approach real estate. When housing—one of the biggest asset classes globally—starts moving like this, it ripples across financial markets. Worth keeping an eye on.
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ApeWithAPlan
· 01-10 11:42
Wow, more than 6% of loans tripled? Is it true that the housing market has been so bleak these past two years?
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CodeAuditQueen
· 01-10 06:18
Look at this data structure... The loan ratio above 6% has tripled, just like a reentrancy vulnerability in smart contracts. Small issues that were ignored have now become systemic risks. The logical chain in the mortgage market has broken, and chain reactions are unavoidable.
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MainnetDelayedAgain
· 01-09 03:51
According to the database, it's only been two years since 2022, and the proportion of loans with over 6% high interest rates has tripled. This art of延期 has already been embedded in the gene of the housing market. Those once 3% low-interest rates? It took a 4.4 percentage point increase to survive... I suggest they be listed in the Guinness World Records. This is the art of time.
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0xSleepDeprived
· 01-09 03:51
Mortgage loans with over 6% interest rate are approaching a quarter, really hard to bear.
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ChainWanderingPoet
· 01-09 03:50
High-interest loans above 6% have tripled; the era of low interest rates is really gone.
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MevHunter
· 01-09 03:49
Loans with interest rates over 6% triple in value... Buying a house has truly become a luxury now
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ProofOfNothing
· 01-09 03:42
I get it, it means that high-interest loans above 6% have tripled in three years, while low-interest loans are almost gone. Is this even allowing people to buy houses anymore...
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DaisyUnicorn
· 01-09 03:28
A 6% interest rate accounts for over 20%? Oh my, isn't this just pushing homebuyers into liquidation hell, just like our on-chain liquidation mechanism—absolutely ruthless... Low-interest mortgages are directly cut in half, and this flower is truly withering.
The US housing market is sending some interesting signals. High-rate mortgages—anything above 6%—now account for 21.2% of all new loans. That's the highest we've seen since 2015. Pretty wild when you think about it: this share has nearly tripled in just two years since 2022. Meanwhile, the other end of the spectrum tells an equally telling story. Those sub-3% rate mortgages that dominated the market? They've cratered, dropping 4.4 percentage points to 20.2%. What does this mean? The mortgage landscape has fundamentally shifted. Borrowing costs have become a serious constraint, and it's reshaping how people approach real estate. When housing—one of the biggest asset classes globally—starts moving like this, it ripples across financial markets. Worth keeping an eye on.