The past year has been a headache for would-be homebuyers who dealt with quickly rising prices and a shrinking number of options. That buyer squeeze now seems to be easing — and the housing headache is shifting to the rental market. Rising vacancy rates during the pandemic led to stagnant or falling rents in many metro areas, but that's showing signs of reversing, creating problems for both renters and the Federal Reserve in the months to come.
Read the whole thing. Retirees, Forget the 4% Withdrawal Rule — Teresa Ghilarducci To Reach Mars, the Human Body May Need Some Updates — Adam Minter Is Singapore Imprisoned by Its Covid Success? — Daniel Moss Is Citi the New 'It' Place to Work on Wall Street? — Tara Lachapelle Trump's Accountant Confronts a Loyalty Test — Timothy L. O'Brien Stop Lauding General Milley's Evasions on Critical Race Theory — Ramesh Ponnuru Crispr Gene-Editing Breakthrough Is a Big Deal. How Big? — Sam Fazeli New Water Wars Are Coming to the American West — Amanda Little More From Bloomberg Opinion ColumnistsHere's what we've been talking about this week. This is the Weekend Edition of Bloomberg Opinion Today, a roundup of the most popular stories Bloomberg Opinion published this week based on web readership. |
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