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Some posts on social media fueled panic that Washington's housing market was rapidly weakening. Agents and an economist said the president's efficiency efforts haven't yet affected the DC market.
The spring selling season saw a trend in the nation's capital, as a sell-off continues due to the DOGE effect.
President Donald Trump has shifted federal economic policy in a big way since his inauguration on Jan. 20. Housing markets across the country will no doubt be impacted in some way, but one city is ...
Home price gains are shrinking quickly and in some cities are actually now lower compared with a year ago. This is due to ...
The Washington, D.C. housing market has started to weaken amidst mass layoffs of federal workers ordered by Elon Musk's so-called Department ... "The DC housing market is already showing signs of ...
Is the Washington, D.C. housing market facing a sudden collapse ignited by DOGE’s job-cutting? ... The inventory in the DC metro housing market isn’t much higher than the COVID-19 inventory lows.
Data shows that housing demand in Washington, D.C., had already been affected even before Trump's inauguration: New home closings dropped by 16 percent in the year leading up to December 2024 ...
In April, throughout the D.C. region, pending sales were 2.5% lower than a year ago, showings by real estate agents were down 8.1% and the number of homes on the market was up 29.2% from April of ...
WASHINGTON — With thousands of federal employees facing termination under the Trump administration, speculation is swirling online about the Washington metro’s housing market entering a freefall.
The Washington, D.C.-area has been enjoying a "Trump Bump" in its luxury home market. That so-called "Trump Bump" started around November, when the nation’s capital saw a major increase in ...
Some posts on social media fueled panic that Washington's housing market was rapidly weakening. Agents and an economist said the president's efficiency efforts haven't yet affected the DC market.