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United States Owners Plan to Stay Put Long Term

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Why Many U.S. Owners Hold Assets Longer Tax rules, borrowing costs, wealth-preservation goals, emotional ties, and valuation gaps are combining to keep many U.S. owners in place far longer than in past cycles. A major force is tax lock-in. In California, Proposition 13 limits property-tax increases, allowing long-time owners to carry unusually low annual costs. That weakens the financial benefit of selling and buying again. Higher mortgage rates reinforce the same decision. Many owners compare today’s financing costs with older low-rate loans and choose to stay put. Holding also supports long-term wealth preservation through continued appreciation and recurring income. Some owners also delay selling while waiting for a peak market that supports their target return. Sentiment and Pricing Friction Emotional attachment further slows turnover, especially with inherited property tied to family memory. At the same time, valuation gaps keep some owners waiting for prices that current markets...

North Carolina Island Estate Sells for Record $12.5M

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Merancas Island Sale Sets Huntersville Record In a market-jolting deal, Merancas Island in Huntersville sold for $12.5 million, setting a new record for a home sale in the town. The Lake Norman estate at 14051 Island Drive closed after a sharp repricing from its original $22 million ask in 2023. It later dropped to $13.99 million, then returned in spring 2026 and reportedly went under contract within about a week. The estate also stood out for its private tennis court , adding to its resort-like appeal. Pricing Reset Signals Market Pressure Local coverage treated the closing as a benchmark for Huntersville and the broader Charlotte luxury market. The transaction suggested that ultra-luxury homes can attract buyers quickly when pricing aligns with demand. Similar high-stakes development stories elsewhere, including South Fulton’s projected $4 billion economic impact , reflect how major real estate moves can reshape local market expectations. The 4.5-acre property, with a roughly 14,317-...

California Home Insurance Set to Spike 16%

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Why California Home Insurance Rates Are Rising As wildfire losses mount, California home insurance rates are rising because insurers face sharply higher expected claim costs across much of the state. More areas are now priced as higher risk, and climate-driven fire behavior has intensified the threat of large, simultaneous losses. Rising rebuilding expenses also matter. Labor, materials, and replacement-cost inflation have increased claim payouts, while higher dwelling limits push premiums upward. Some insurers have also reduced coverage in vulnerable regions, creating limited competition that can push rates higher. Broader disaster exposure adds pressure. Recent record rain and atmospheric rivers in Southern California have also exposed insurers to growing flood, mudslide, and infrastructure-related loss risks. Floods, drought, storms, and earthquake risk create underwriting uncertainty, especially in the wildland-urban interface. Insurers also face higher reinsurance costs after ma...

The 200th Episode of The REI Agent That Turns Relationships Into Momentum with Mattias Clymer

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Key Takeaways Mattias Clymer’s 200th episode celebrates consistency, gratitude, and the power of building a business around real human connection. The REI Agent CRM is positioned as a relationship-first tool designed to help agents stay in touch without automating away the personal touch. Long-term success requires more than closing deals, because agents also need systems for follow-up, client service, commission planning, and future freedom. United States Real Estate Investor® The 200th Episode of REI Agent with Mattias Clymer https://youtu.be/RA4uMR7GYJU United States Real Estate Investor® Value-rich, The REI Agent podcast takes a holistic approach to life through real estate. Hosted by Mattias Clymer, an agent and investor, alongside his wife Erica Clymer, a licensed therapist, the show features guests who strive to live bold and fulfilled lives through business and real estate investing. You are personally invited to witness inspiring conversations with agents and inve...

The 30-Year Mortgage Changed America (250 Years of American Real Estate)

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Key Takeaways The 30-year mortgage made homeownership more accessible by lowering monthly payments and reducing the need for large upfront savings. It helped many families build equity, settle in single-family homes, and fuel the growth of American suburbs. Its legacy is complicated, contributing to higher home prices, long-term debt, and unequal access through redlining and unfair lending. How Long-Term Home Loans Reshaped American Life The 30-year mortgage changed America by letting you buy a home with lower monthly payments instead of huge savings upfront. It helped families move into single-family homes, build equity, and plant roots in growing suburbs. But it also raised home prices , stretched debt across decades, and shut out many families through redlining and unfair lending. You still feel its power today in prices, choices, and dreams, and the story keeps revealing what comes next. How the 30-Year Mortgage Became Standard Before the 30-year mortgage became the American stan...

Manhattan Median Rent Jumps Nearly 10% to Record

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Manhattan Median Rent Hit $4,571 In May 2025, Manhattan’s median monthly rent climbed to a record $4,571, according to Douglas Elliman’s report prepared by Miller Samuel. That figure reflects new leases signed during the month, not all occupied apartments across the borough. Brick Underground and Bloomberg Law cited the same median, reinforcing the reported benchmark. May also marked the third record in four months, signaling that elevated pricing had become a recurring market condition. Later in 2025, Manhattan’s vacancy rate would fall to a record-low 1.56%, underscoring how tight supply continued to support rent growth. Pressure Points Behind the Record The market remained competitive even with the highest inventory since 2021. Nearly 25% of leases signed in May went for above the asking price, highlighting bidding wars across the borough. Renters continued to face bidding wars, while rising price per square foot underscored broad cost pressure. Bloomberg Law tied conditions partl...

New York City Renter Lands 2-Bedroom for $1,680

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How Rare Is a $1,680 NYC 2-Bedroom? How unusual that figure appears depends on which New York City rent measure is used. Citywide medians make $1,680 look familiar. The American Community Survey placed median gross rent at $1,680, and another 2023 citywide median for all renter-occupied units was $1,641.90. In New York City’s majority-renter city , 69% of households rent, which helps explain why broad citywide medians can differ so much from current listing prices. Those figures reflect all housing types, not the active two-bedroom market. Similar affordability pressures in places like Boston have pushed some young adults toward suburban areas in search of lower housing costs. Active Listings Signal Sharp Pressure Market dynamics change the picture quickly. The 2023 median asking rent citywide was $3,500, while market rentals had a median of $2,000. That gap shows why renter stories about a $1,680 two-bedroom stand out. Current two-bedroom asking rents are typically far higher, often ...