March 2026

Why some expensive homes don’t feel luxurious at all

It’s a strange disconnect that shows up more often than you’d expect. A home carries a multi-million-dollar price tag, sits in a sought-after location, and checks all the obvious boxes: size, finishes, amenities. And yet, something about it feels… off. Not bad, exactly. Just not luxurious. At the same time, there are homes at far lower price points that manage to feel far more refined,...

EXCLUSIVE: $23M Arte Surfside condo lists, spotlighting one of Miami’s most exclusive oceanfront enclaves

A new ultra-luxury listing has quietly surfaced in one of South Florida’s most tightly held oceanfront buildings. Unit 301 at Arte Surfside has just hit the market for $22.95 million, offering a rare opportunity to buy into a boutique development that has already set records across Miami-Dade. Completed as a 16-residence project, the building quickly established itself as one of the most exclusive...

U.S. Housing Market Stalls as Iran War Pushes Rates Up Four Straight Weeks

The long-anticipated rebound in the U.S. housing market is losing momentum, as a fresh uptick in borrowing costs and escalating geopolitical tensions inject new uncertainty into an already fragile recovery. After entering 2026 with cautious optimism, economists had projected a modest revival in home sales, driven by easing mortgage rates and a gradual increase in housing supply. Instead, renewed...

Fort Worth growth resets the Dallas-Fort Worth housing map

For the past decade, Dallas-Fort Worth’s housing story has been written in bold letters along the U.S. 75 corridor – Frisco, McKinney, Plano and every patch of land north of there that could support a rooftop and a Starbucks. The northeast corner became a symbol of Texas growth: prices soared, commutes stretched and master-planned communities stacked up so tight you could borrow sugar through the...

Mortgage rates now closer to 7% than 6% as the Iran war escalates

Two weeks ago on CNBC, I talked about how the housing market was poised for growth for the first time in years — unless mortgage rates shot up due to the war with Iran. Mortgage rates were sub 6% before the war and today they hit 6.62%, according to Mortgage News Daily. That is a big move. It’s unfortunately the kind of move that the housing market has grown accustomed to over the past few years,...

Bill Pulte targets Letitia James with new criminal referrals

Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director Bill Pulte is again targeting New York Attorney General Letitia James, this time filing criminal referrals with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) over alleged insurance fraud. The referrals were sent to two U.S. attorneys — Jason Reding Quinones of the Southern District of Florida and Andrew Boutros of the Northern District of Illinois — who were...

The GSEs updated their rules for condo loans. Will they be helpful or harmful?

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac last week enacted updates to condominium project standards and property insurance rules for one- to four-unit properties and larger developments, aiming to lower costs for homeowners. The moves have been met with mixed opinions from mortgage professionals. The updates, which Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced on March 18, allow greater leeway in how replacement cost...

‘Six-figure limit’ aims to halt Social Security trust fund insolvency

With the Social Security trust fund less than seven years from insolvency — at which point a 24% across-the-board benefit cut could be triggered — a new proposal suggests capping annual payouts for the nation’s wealthiest retirees. A white paper released by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget advocates for a “six-figure limit” that would cap Social Security benefits at $100,000 per...

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