Home prices are set to nosedive, bringing along the party crashers: negative equity, foreclosures, and mortgage defaults.
So, grab your popcorn and keep an eye on those economic indicators because when the market bottoms out, it'll be the perfect time to pounce.
Enter Howard Marks, the billionaire with a game plan.
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Marks is coolly building his dream portfolio from the wreckage. It's a long game, and he's in it to win it.
Over in San Francisco, not even the shiny AI boom can save the real estate scene from its epic faceplant, with companies bailing on their leases.
But hey, one person's crisis is another's bargain bin bonanza.
In this edition of the AltReports:
🏚️ Price Panic
💰 Distressed Deals
🏡 Investor’s Inventory
🏠 Property Plunge
📊 Finance Fumbles
Video of the Week: Why Home Prices Will Crash In 2026
Chart of the Week: The Housing Market, Explained in 6 Charts
Podcast of the Week: Crash Started "SELL NOW" says Economist Harry Dent Jr
The Market is in for a Sharp Correction that Could Take a Decade to Recover From
Experts are predicting a massive correction, with home prices set to plummet.
Negative equity will make a grand entrance, dragging foreclosure rates and mortgage defaults along for the party.
Keep a close eye on economic indicators and be ready to swoop in when the market hits rock bottom.
Billionaire Investor Howard Marks Says 70% Discount On Offices Might Not Be Enough
Meet Howard Marks, the billionaire investor who is gearing up for a shopping spree like no other.
His strategy? Focus on quality assets with solid financials and ride out the storm.
While the market's in turmoil, Marks is playing the long game, building a robust portfolio from the wreckage.
Manhattan is Now a 'Buyer's Market' as Real Estate Prices Fall and Inventory Rises
It's official: Manhattan is having a real estate blowout sale.
For years, the city’s market was a fortress of high prices and fierce competition, but now, buyers hold all the cards.
Sellers are facing extended listing times and are being forced to lower their expectations.
San Francisco's AI Boom Can't Stop Real Estate Slide
Not even the AI boom can save San Francisco's real estate from its current faceplant.
High-profile companies are downsizing or ditching their leases altogether, leaving a trail of vacant offices in their wake.
But where there's crisis, there's also opportunity. Distressed investors can swoop in to pick up these underperforming assets at bargain-basement prices.
An Office CRE Deal of the Low-Interest-Rate Era Gets Shredded in Foreclosure
Once upon a time in sunny Southern California, a $65 million office real estate deal was sealed with a dream and a low-interest rate.
Fast forward to now, and that dream has turned into a nightmare.
The property owners defaulted on their $43.3 million loan, leading to a foreclosure fire sale that fetched a measly $26 million.