OK, I'll be less pedantic. I think it's just flat out wrong.
It was a red hot market about a year and a half ago. Prices were shooting up, and there was a frenzy of buying, with lots of people feeling FOMO for not buying a house. The situation now is completely different.
Housing prices rarely, rarely go down without widespread unemployment because people are so loath to sell at a loss. So the situation is a bit odd right now it that so many people can't move because interest rates are so high, but unemployment is still low so people aren't forced to sell. The reason prices have stayed relatively flat is because for the small amount of inventory that has come on the market there's still little reason to sell at a loss. That's still the opposite of any definition of a hot market.
It was a red hot market about a year and a half ago. Prices were shooting up, and there was a frenzy of buying, with lots of people feeling FOMO for not buying a house. The situation now is completely different.
Housing prices rarely, rarely go down without widespread unemployment because people are so loath to sell at a loss. So the situation is a bit odd right now it that so many people can't move because interest rates are so high, but unemployment is still low so people aren't forced to sell. The reason prices have stayed relatively flat is because for the small amount of inventory that has come on the market there's still little reason to sell at a loss. That's still the opposite of any definition of a hot market.