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  • The Housing Outlook for late 2026

    The Housing Outlook for late 2026

    The housing market in the first half of 2026 was largely characterized by stabilization, ongoing affordability constraints and muted transaction…

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  • Designing For Today’s Luxury Homebuyer

    Designing For Today’s Luxury Homebuyer

    This issue of Builder and Developer features our mid-year housing update and insights into the future of luxury living.

  • Construction employment increases in 32 states

    Construction employment increases in 32 states

    Construction employment rose in 32 states from April 2025 to April 2026, according to an analysis of new federal data released by the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC)on May 22, 2026. Texas added the most construction jobs, adding approximately 18,700 jobs, followed by North Carolina, Ohio, Louisiana, Illinois and Missouri. Louisiana had the largest percentage gain in the span of 12 months.

    “It’s encouraging to see construction employment increasing in many parts of the country,” said Ken Simonson, the AGC’s chief economist.

    In April 2026, Florida added the most construction jobs with 6,000, followed by Texas with 3,500, Massachusetts with 3,100, North Carolina with 2,700 and New Mexico with 2,600.

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  • Housing economist comments on core inflation report

    Housing economist comments on core inflation report

    The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released the April report for Personal Income and Outlays, outlining core inflation at 0.4% for the month and a 3.8%12-month inflation rate. This is an indication that on the next Fed decision on June 17, 2026 might continue March’s holding pattern.

    The BEA data does not relay one singular outcome for the housing market with a varying landscape across the U.S.

    “When inflation runs this hot, the Fed stays put and mortgage rates stay stuck in the mid-6s,” said Dr. Selma Hepp, Cotality‘s Chief Economist and regular contributor to Builder and Developer. “That freezes the national housing market in place. But a flat national number is hiding a lot behind the scenes. In fact, at a local level, many markets are hiding a complex landscape that is completely fractured from national numbers.”

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  • March sees lowest saving rates since June 2022

    March sees lowest saving rates since June 2022

    According to the latest data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, March 2026 saw the lowest personal saving rates since June 2022. On a year-over-year basis, personal income was 2.5% higher in March than in April 2025. As consumer spending outpaced income growth, the personal saving rate fell to 2.6%. This data point implies households are drawing more heavily on savings to support spending.

    Personal income was essentially unchanged in April 2026, following a 0.5% gain in March. Personal consumption expenditure rose 0.5% in April, following a 1% increase in March. Real spending, which was adjusted to remove inflation, increased 0.1% in April, with expenditure goods declining 0.2% and spending on services up 0.2%.

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