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Happy Friday! For some lucky folks, today is the last day of work for the year, with two weeks of downtime at home ahead — give or take the millions of American set to travel over the holidays.

With that in mind we have some stories about work in today’s newsletter, plus the state of the housing market both now and into 2026. By the way — this is far from Marketplace’s last day of work, but we could use your support today to keep us strong in the coming year. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
An arial view of homes on the beach.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Look out for a "housing reset” in 2026
Experts told Marketplace’s Amy Scott they predict a gradually improving market —  with some big caveats.

It’s the time of year when our inboxes fill up with economic forecasts for the coming year, which the Marketplace staff takes with a healthy dose of skepticism.

Afterall, the late economist Ezra Solomon is credited with saying, “the only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.”

Still, it can be instructive to know what smart people with skin in the game are thinking about, going into a new year. With that in mind, let’s look at some forecasts for the housing market. 

Before we get to 2026, though, here’s how our informal panel of experts summed up the year in housing we’re leaving behind: Between the high cost of borrowing, stubbornly high prices, and all the economic uncertainty this year, they said, sales of both existing and new homes were pretty lackluster.

“I would say 2025 was a year of many headwinds, and as a result, a year of frustration, I think, for both buyers and sellers,” said Jake Krimmel, senior economist at Realtor.com. “Overall, a year where nobody really walked away very happy.”

Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin, agreed. “Buyers were up against high mortgage rates, high prices, and sellers were feeling like they weren't getting the offers that they deserved in order to give up the record low mortgage rates they got during the pandemic,” she said.

Rick Palacios Jr., director of research at John Burns Research and Consulting, summed up the 2025 market with one word: “underwhelming.”

Most analysts expect sales of existing homes to pick up in 2026.

Fairweather is predicting a yearslong “housing reset” will begin next year, with gradually improving affordability. 

“Mortgage rates have already come down, and we think they're going to stay at these lower levels of around 6.3% for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage, which means that it's going to be more affordable to buy a home next year,” she said.

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Rebounds for artificial intelligence companies helped Wall Street erase most of the week’s losses today. The S&P 500 closed up 0.9% today, 0.1% on the week. The Dow added 0.4% to narrow its weekly loss and the Nasdaq leapt 1.3% today for a 0.5% gain this week.

  • Consumer sentiment is ending this year very close to its record low from June 2022.

  • President Donald Trump announced deals with nine more drug companies to lower costs.

  • Bytedance, the Chinese parent company of TikTok, is reportedly on track to make $50 billion in profit this year. 

  • So why is the just-signed deal turning TikTok over to American investors to avoid a ban only worth about $14 billion? Turns out the agreement is quite nuanced, a surgical spin-off of some U.S. operations from the Chinese-owned TikTok global.

Office life

  • New York City has created more than 12,000 new apartments from office buildings that struggled to recover since the pandemic. What can other cities learn?

  • What’s in your office coffee maker? Even though its patent expired in 2012, Keurig has managed to hold onto an 80% share of the coffee pod market by locking down distributors and even trying a sort of “coffee DRM.”

  • The spread at your office holiday party is a handy indicator for the outlook going into 2026. But good news or bad, should you let loose? From the archives, we have answers to all your holiday office etiquette questions.

  • Companies appear to be more willing to lay off workers at the holidays this year. If you’re so unlucky, here’s what to do with your LinkedIn right away.

  • By the way, did you know LinkedIn has its own version of Spotify Wrapped? Who asked for this?
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LET'S GO
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I think that ultimately, for affordability in Austin, it is a good thing that prices have readjusted."
—  Krystal Shaw with Roots Residential Group

Austin, Texas, was the poster child of the pandemic-era housing boom. But today, it’s a buyer’s market. Sales have slowed, prices have fallen, and sellers are offering concessions.

They don’t have to in Cleveland, still very much a seller’s market, whereas in Jacksonville, Florida is more balanced. Real estate agents in each of those three cities told us what they’re seeing on the ground as we head into the new year.
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We've come a long way together, but there’s still much work to be done. In 2026, Marketplace is preparing to meet the moment and shape the conversation. Will you join us?
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Activists spread a large tarp with a photo of Donald Trump and Jeffery Epstein in view of the U.S. Capitol.
Final note
What happens when AI runs your office vending machine

It’s a squishy term, all the more so after Trump administration officials up to the President himself demanded their release, then called them a hoax before acquiescing to Congressional demands for transparency — with some redactions. 

The New York financier and convicted sex offender left a huge paper trail when he died in 2019, and bits and pieces of that trail have shed new light on Epstein’s relationship with Trump,former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and many more public figures. 

The Justice Department released thousands of new documents today, and said more would be coming in the next few weeks. If you’re struggling to follow this story, the Wall Street Journal has a useful running list of what’s been disclosed so far. Here’s a gift link.

 
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