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Record Streak, Frozen Homes?
The world's most powerful central bank just lost a 62-month staring contest with its own target โ and the housing market next door is quietly rewriting the affordability playbook while nobody was watching. These two forces are pulling on every risk asset from equities to crypto, and the connection is tighter than most traders realize.
๐น #PCE inflation has burned above the Federal Reserve's 2% line since April 2021 โ 62 consecutive months and counting, the longest overshoot since the target was formally adopted in 2012. Headline PCE clocked 3.5% year-over-year in March, while core PCE held at 3.2%. The Cleveland Fed's Nowcasting model projects April PCE accelerating to roughly 3.83%, with May potentially hitting 4.06% โ a trajectory that has former New York Fed President Bill Dudley openly warning the central bank risks losing all credibility as an inflation fighter. Consumers feel it with every transaction: #CPI surged to 3.8% in April, the hottest print since 2023.
๐น The bond market absorbed this message with discipline. Wall Street's largest desks โ Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Bank of America โ have collectively pushed rate cut expectations into 2027. The era of waiting for the pivot is officially over. Higher-for-longer has transitioned from a cautionary phrase into the structural backdrop for every portfolio allocation decision. For risk assets, this means liquidity stays expensive and the hurdle rate for speculative capital remains elevated.
๐น Housing inventory has cycled from crisis to cautious recovery. Total existing home inventory reached 1.47 million units in April, translating to 4.3 months of supply โ up from 4.2 a year ago. Single-family inventory rose 2.4% year-over-year, a dramatic shift from the deeply negative readings that defined 2022's peak shortage. Months of supply now sits at 5.10 in the single-family segment, bordering on buyer-friendly territory for the first time in years. The market has not tipped into excess โ 4.4 months remains well below the 8+ months that triggered the 2008 correction โ but the direction of travel is unmistakable.
๐น Homebuilder stocks are absorbing this shift with surprising resilience. The SPDR S&P Homebuilders #ETF surged over 11% early in the year while the S&P 500 was barely positive, reflecting a contrarian bet that normalizing inventory supports transaction volumes even as mortgage rates hover near 6.4%. Builder sentiment, as measured by the NAHB index, rose three points in May to 37. Builders are deploying incentives aggressively โ 61% offered sales sweeteners including mortgage-rate buydowns โ and their ability to subsidize financing gives them a structural edge over existing homeowners locked into sub-3% mortgages. The lock-in effect continues suppressing resale inventory, which is exactly what keeps builders in the game.
๐น The macro through-line is a slow-burning pressure cooker. Persistent inflation above target forces the Fed to keep rates elevated, which sustains mortgage costs above 6%, which locks homeowners in place, which constrains resale supply, which props up prices, which keeps shelter costs โ the single largest component of the CPI basket โ elevated, which feeds right back into inflation. The housing market is no longer a bystander in the inflation story; it is a transmission mechanism.
The Fed is chasing a target it has not touched in five years, and the housing market is frozen precisely because rates cannot come down until that target is met. A contradiction wrapped in a stalemate โ and every asset class is positioned somewhere inside that tension. How are you navigating the persistence of sticky inflation and a housing market that refuses to break either higher or lower?
The world's most powerful central bank just lost a 62-month staring contest with its own target โ and the housing market next door is quietly rewriting the affordability playbook while nobody was watching. These two forces are pulling on every risk asset from equities to crypto, and the connection is tighter than most traders realize.
๐น #PCE inflation has burned above the Federal Reserve's 2% line since April 2021 โ 62 consecutive months and counting, the longest overshoot since the target was formally adopted in 2012. Headline PCE clocked 3.5% year-over-year in March, while core PCE held at 3.2%. The Cleveland Fed's Nowcasting model projects April PCE accelerating to roughly 3.83%, with May potentially hitting 4.06% โ a trajectory that has former New York Fed President Bill Dudley openly warning the central bank risks losing all credibility as an inflation fighter. Consumers feel it with every transaction: #CPI surged to 3.8% in April, the hottest print since 2023.
๐น The bond market absorbed this message with discipline. Wall Street's largest desks โ Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Bank of America โ have collectively pushed rate cut expectations into 2027. The era of waiting for the pivot is officially over. Higher-for-longer has transitioned from a cautionary phrase into the structural backdrop for every portfolio allocation decision. For risk assets, this means liquidity stays expensive and the hurdle rate for speculative capital remains elevated.
๐น Housing inventory has cycled from crisis to cautious recovery. Total existing home inventory reached 1.47 million units in April, translating to 4.3 months of supply โ up from 4.2 a year ago. Single-family inventory rose 2.4% year-over-year, a dramatic shift from the deeply negative readings that defined 2022's peak shortage. Months of supply now sits at 5.10 in the single-family segment, bordering on buyer-friendly territory for the first time in years. The market has not tipped into excess โ 4.4 months remains well below the 8+ months that triggered the 2008 correction โ but the direction of travel is unmistakable.
๐น Homebuilder stocks are absorbing this shift with surprising resilience. The SPDR S&P Homebuilders #ETF surged over 11% early in the year while the S&P 500 was barely positive, reflecting a contrarian bet that normalizing inventory supports transaction volumes even as mortgage rates hover near 6.4%. Builder sentiment, as measured by the NAHB index, rose three points in May to 37. Builders are deploying incentives aggressively โ 61% offered sales sweeteners including mortgage-rate buydowns โ and their ability to subsidize financing gives them a structural edge over existing homeowners locked into sub-3% mortgages. The lock-in effect continues suppressing resale inventory, which is exactly what keeps builders in the game.
๐น The macro through-line is a slow-burning pressure cooker. Persistent inflation above target forces the Fed to keep rates elevated, which sustains mortgage costs above 6%, which locks homeowners in place, which constrains resale supply, which props up prices, which keeps shelter costs โ the single largest component of the CPI basket โ elevated, which feeds right back into inflation. The housing market is no longer a bystander in the inflation story; it is a transmission mechanism.
The Fed is chasing a target it has not touched in five years, and the housing market is frozen precisely because rates cannot come down until that target is met. A contradiction wrapped in a stalemate โ and every asset class is positioned somewhere inside that tension. How are you navigating the persistence of sticky inflation and a housing market that refuses to break either higher or lower?