Saturday, November 8, 2025
On cross-country:
- What is driving European cities’ housing affordability challenge? Housing affordability has emerged as a central challenge across Europe, particularly in major cities and tourist hotspots. – Oxford Economics
- Has Airbnb reached its peak? Brian Chesky, its boss, wants to offer more than just a bed to sleep on – The Economist
- Tourism, Short-Term Rentals and Housing Affordability – European Parliament
- Housing Challenges for Young Europeans – European Parliament
- La especulación inmobiliaria sacude Europa. Las dificultades para los ciudadanos se han agravado a medida que han retrocedido las políticas sociales – El Pais
Working papers and conferences:
- Monetary Policy and Housing Overvaluation – NBER
- Planes Overhead: How Airplane Noise Impacts Home Values – NBER
- Building Segregation: The Long-Run Neighborhood Effects of American Public Housing – UC Davis
- Global Tides on Local Shores: how do international capital flows affect house prices? – University of Zurich
- Aging and Housing Returns – Philadelphia Fed
- The Role of Single-Family Rentals in the U.S. Housing Market – St. Louis Fed
- Multifamily housing operators describe a “precarious position”. Apartment owners and managers report more financial stability now than last year, but say there’s lots more uncertainty ahead – Minneapolis Fed
On Australia and New Zealand:
- [Australia] There’s a catch in the plan to build more affordable housing in Sydney – and tenants are feeling the brunt. As the NSW developer bonus leads to older buildings being knocked down to make way for new, low-cost renters fear being priced out of their neighbourhood – The Guardian
- [Australia] Australia’s home prices surge by most in over two years in October – Reuters
- [Australia] RBA holds official interest rate at 3.6% while warning of rising house prices and rents. Reserve Bank’s decision to leave cash rate on hold was widely expected and major banks predict no interest rates cut until 2026 – The Guardian
- [Australia] More homes, better cities: Letting more people live where they want – Grattan Institute
On other countries:
- [Canada] Canadian Snowbirds Are Ducking Out of the U.S. Housing Market Over Trump Tariffs—but These Sun-Soaked Spots Still Shine – Realtor.com
- [Canada] Toronto Home Sales Dip as Tariff Fears Keep Buyers Sidelined – Bloomberg
- [Korea] South Korea’s Housing Market Is a ‘Ticking Bomb,’ President Says – Bloomberg
- [Netherlands] As the Dutch Vote, One Issue Carries the Day: Affordable Housing. The small European nation of 18 million people is in the middle of its worst housing crunch in decades. But there is no quick political solution. – New York Times
- [United Kingdom] How new renters’ rights could drive landlords out of the market – The Conversation
- [United Kingdom] Britain’s housing chief is channeling Trump. Labour MPs are getting queasy. Steve Reed’s donning the red hat and bringing the energy — but is he risking Labour seats? – Politico
- [United Kingdom] What will Labour sacrifice for its housing targets? A standoff in south London is putting it to the test – The Guardian
- [United Kingdom] New homes: even if you build them, there’s no one to buy them. We’re often told housing demand exceeds supply — so why are new homes struggling to be built and bought? – FT
- [United Kingdom] UK net mortgage approvals hit 9-month high despite Budget tax fears. BoE figures show activity in housing market remains resilient – FT
- [United Kingdom] UK House Prices Increase Again in October, Nationwide Says – Bloomberg
- [United Kingdom] UK house prices rise in October, defying pre-budget nerves – Reuters
- [United Kingdom] Rachel Reeves plans Budget tax raid on expensive homes. UK chancellor predicted to plump for ‘least worst option’ of creating higher council tax bands in England – FT
- [United Kingdom] UK house price growth slows as buyers ‘sit on sidelines’ before budget. Amid talk of property taxes, average price of home rose by 0.3% in October to £272,226, Nationwide says – The Guardian
- [United Kingdom] ‘Out of reach’: stalled newbuilds leave Labour’s social housing targets in tatters. As some families face a 200-year wait for an affordable home, what exactly has gone wrong? – The Guardian
- [United Kingdom] Average house prices to increase by 22.2% over the next five years – Savills
Posted by Prakash Loungani at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch