Why Rising Foreclosures Are Not 2008 Again
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
“Foreclosures are rising” is the kind of headline that can hijack your nervous system, especially if you remember 2008. We slow it down and put real numbers and real context behind the fear: foreclosure filings can increase from artificially low pandemic levels without signaling a housing crash. The question we keep coming back to is not “Are we crashing?” but “What’s the full context, and what does it mean right here in Western North Carolina?”
From there, we bring it home to the Henderson County real estate market. Inventory is still limited, demand is still moving, and prices are holding steady even as buyers take more time. We talk through what we’re seeing in pending sales, new listings, and why longer days on market can be a sign of a stabilizing market rather than a falling one. We also explain why homeowner equity changes the foreclosure story and how it can create options like selling, refinancing, negotiating, or downsizing before things ever get to a worst-case outcome.
Then the conversation takes a turn into something deeper: a book that’s been encouraging and challenging us, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying by palliative care worker Bonnie Ware. We walk through the regrets people share most often and what they invite us to do now, not someday, with our time, relationships, and happiness. Real estate is never just a house, it’s a life transition, and we want you making decisions with clarity, not fear.
If this helps, subscribe to the podcast, share it with a friend in Western NC, and leave a quick review so more neighbors can find grounded market guidance. What headline do you want us to put in context next?