22 FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) charts on housing from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
- Prices – 4
- New Homes – 2
- Supply – 3
- Mortgages – 6
- Households – 7
Prices
Median Sales Price of Houses Sold
Real Residential Property Prices for United States
House Price To Rent Ratio
Median Sales Price for New Houses Sold
New Homes
New One Family Homes for Sale
New One-Family Houses Sold
Supply
Months Supply of Houses for Sale
Owner-Occupied and Renter-Occupied Housing Units
Owner-Occupied and Renter-Occupied Vacancy Rates
Mortgages
30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Rate
30-year Fixed Rate Mortgage Rate & 10-Year Treasury Rate
Spread Between 30-Year Mortgage Rate & 10-Year Treasury Rate
30-Year Fixed Rate & 30-10 Spread (since 2015)
Origination Fees and Discount Points for 30-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage
Who Holds Mortgages?
5-Year Inflation Expectation
30-Year Inflation Expectations
Households
Homeownership Rate
Real Median Household Income
Household Debt Service Payments as a Percent of Disposable Personal Income
Mortgage Debt Service Payments as a Percent of Disposable Personal Income
Households; Owners’ Equity in Real Estate
Households; Owners’ Equity in Real Estate as a Percentage of Household Real Estate
Household Saving
One Response to 22 Federal Reserve Housing Charts
I like this site a lot. Thanks. I see the site is mostly pointing to slowing real estate price growth at present and also the high bubble territory that many metros are in. But can I interpret the debt service as percent of disposable income and the savings graph to mean that home prices can remain at this level or keep going up?