• Live Feeds
    • Press Releases
    • Insider Trading
    • FDA Approvals
    • Analyst Ratings
    • Insider Trading
    • SEC filings
    • Market insights
  • Analyst Ratings
  • Alerts
  • Subscriptions
  • Settings
  • RSS Feeds
Quantisnow Logo
  • Live Feeds
    • Press Releases
    • Insider Trading
    • FDA Approvals
    • Analyst Ratings
    • Insider Trading
    • SEC filings
    • Market insights
  • Analyst Ratings
  • Alerts
  • Subscriptions
  • Settings
  • RSS Feeds
PublishGo to App
    Quantisnow Logo

    © 2026 quantisnow.com
    Democratizing insights since 2022

    Services
    Live news feedsRSS FeedsAlertsPublish with Us
    Company
    AboutQuantisnow PlusContactJobsAI superconnector for talent & startupsNEWLLM Arena
    Legal
    Terms of usePrivacy policyCookie policy

    Realtor.com® Monthly Housing Report: Affordability Reshapes Where Americans Can Buy Homes

    12/8/25 6:00:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary
    Get the next $NWS alert in real time by email

    Delistings rose 37.9% year-over-year and buyers found relief in refuge markets

    AUSTIN, Texas, Dec. 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The U.S. housing market held to the steady pattern that has defined much of 2025 this November but beneath the surface, two powerful forces continued to reshape activity. The first is an increase in delistings as more homeowners retreated from the market, and the second is rise of "refuge markets," where buyers are finding the last remaining pockets of affordability, according to Realtor.com®'s November Monthly Housing Trends Report. Both trends underscore how persistent affordability challenges are driving both sellers' and buyers' decisions heading into year-end.

    "Rising delistings and the growth of refuge markets capture the push and pull defining today's housing market," said Danielle Hale, Chief Economist at Realtor.com®. "A number of sellers are retreating after listing if the market doesn't meet their price expectations, while buyers are strategically redirecting to the metros that remain affordable. These dynamics reflect how higher rates and years of rapid price growth have rewritten the rules of engagement for both buyers and sellers. As we move into 2026, gradual improvements in affordability and more consistent inventory will be key to unlocking a more balanced market."

    The November Monthly Housing Report aligns with Realtor.com®'s newly released 2026 Housing Forecast, which anticipates a slow but steady improvement in buyer conditions as more inventory comes online and affordability begins to ease. With mortgage rates expected to stabilize and inventory growth continuing into 2026, the housing landscape is gradually shifting toward an environment where buyers have more options and slightly more leverage, even as overall activity remains subdued.

    November 2025 Housing Metrics – National (*For metro stats, see table overview at end)

    Metric

    Nov-2025

    Change over

    Oct. 2025

    (MoM)

    Change over

    Nov. 2024

    (YoY)

    Change over

    Nov. 2019

    Change over

    Nov. 2022

    Median listing price

    $415,000

    -2.2 %

    -0.4 %

    36.1 %

    -0.2 %

    Active listings

    1,072,417

    -2.5 %

    12.6 %

    -6.2 %

    42.9 %

    New listings

    328,760

    -14.4 %

    1.7 %

    -10.9 %

    11.4 %

    Median days on market

    64

    2

    3

    -3

    9

    Share of active listings with price reductions

    18.0 %

    -2.2

    1.3

    2.8

    -2.2

    Median List Price Per Sq.Ft.

    $222

    -1.2 %

    -1.0 %

    48.4 %

    3.3 %

    Refuge Markets Rise as Buyers Search for What's Still Affordable

    Buyers are increasingly finding opportunities in smaller, traditionally affordable "refuge markets," a defining trend of 2025. These metros are seeing notable growth in price per square foot, not because they are expensive, but because they remain affordable.

    All 10 of the top markets for annual price-per-square-foot growth fit this refuge market profile. Prices remain well below national and regional medians, yet demand is strong enough to push sustained appreciation. Many are located near pricier coastal or major metros, offering budget-conscious buyers a feasible commute or hybrid-work option.

    Top-performing refuge markets include:

    • Grand Rapids, MI: +5.5% YoY PPSF, +15.4% since 2022
    • St. Louis: +5.0% YoY PPSF, + 7.7% since 2022
    • Cleveland: +4.5% YoY PPSF, +20.3% since 2022
    • Milwaukee: +4.2% YoY PPSF, +21.0% since 2022
    • Pittsburgh: +3.7% YoY PPSF, + 7.8% since 2022

    These markets reveal how affordability pressures are re-drawing the map of U.S. housing demand. With mortgage rates having surged past 6% in 2022 and remaining elevated, many buyers are moving "down-market" toward metros where prices are 20–30% below the national median, even at their 2022 peak.

    Delisting Trends in 2025

    Sellers continued to pull back at an unusually high rate this fall. Delistings in October, reported with a one-month lag, rose 45.5% year to date and 37.9% year over year, marking 2025 as the highest delisting year since Realtor.com® began tracking the metric in 2022.

    While delistings normally increase in late fall, this year's pattern tells a different story. The run-up began in June and has remained elevated for five straight months, with roughly 6% of active listings coming off the market each month—levels typically seen only during the slowest winter weeks.

    A key indicator, the delisting-to-new-listing ratio, climbed to 0.27 in October. For every 100 new listings brought to market, 27 homes were removed, about the same level as in August, but up from 20 per 100 in October 2024. The markets with the highest ratios were:

    • Miami: 45 delistings per 100 new listings, up from 34 in Oct. 2024
    • Denver: 39 per 100 new listings, up from 24 in Oct. 2024
    • Houston: 37per 100 new listings, up from 31 in Oct. 2024

    This reflects a growing mismatch between buyer affordability and seller price expectations, with more homeowners choosing to step back rather than continue to market homes that aren't attracting offers.

    Sellers Retreat While Buyers Grow More Selective

    Pending home sales dipped 1.0% year over year in November, and homes spent a median of 64 days on the market, three days longer than last year. Yet homes are still selling four days faster than 2017–2019 norms.

    Price cuts remained elevated at 18.0% of listings, up 1.3 percentage points from a year ago, a sign that many sellers must adjust expectations to meet buyers where they are.

    List Prices Tick Down Nationally, Rise Only in the Midwest

    The national median list price fell to $415,000 in November, down 0.4% year over year and 2.2% from October. Price per square foot—a measure that accounts for the size of homes for sale—declined 1.0% annually and 1.2% month over month.

    Despite this year's softness, long-term gains remain substantial. Since November 2019, the typical list price is up 36.1%, while price per square foot has climbed 48.4%, reshaping affordability even before accounting for higher mortgage rates. And although inventory has risen 42.9% and time on market has lengthened by 9 days since October 2022, list prices are just 0.2% below their October 2022 level and price per square foot is up 3.3%.

    Price cuts remain prevalent. Nationally, 18.0% of listings had price reductions in November, up 1.3 percentage points from a year ago. Price cuts were least common in the tight Northeast (12.8%), followed by the Midwest (18.2%), West (18.5%), and South (19.1%).

    Inventory Growth Continues—But at a Slower Pace

    Active listings rose 12.6% year over year in November, marking the 25th consecutive month of annual inventory gains. But growth has decelerated steadily from a roughly 30% peak in May and June. Inventory remained above 1 million for the seventh straight month and close to mid-summer levels, though still 11.7% below 2017–2019 norms.

    Inventory rose across all major regions: West: +14.3%, South: +14.1%, Midwest: +10.3% and Northeast: +7.0%

    At the metro level, 47 of the 50 largest markets saw annual inventory increases. Charlotte (+34.7%), Las Vegas (+33.0%) and Washington, D.C. (+32.0%) posted the biggest gains.

    Even so, inventory relative to pre-pandemic levels remains deeply divided. The West (+3.1%) and South (+5.7%) are above their 2017–2019 norms, while the Midwest (-32.9%) and Northeast (-48.4%) continue to lag sharply. Ten major markets now exceed pre-pandemic inventory by 25% or more—led by Denver (+58.3%), San Antonio (+53.0%), and Austin (+42.8%). On the other end of the spectrum, 16 metros remain at least 25% below their historical baselines, with Hartford (-74.0%), Chicago (-55.1%), and Providence (-49.7%) the furthest behind.

    Newly listed homes ticked up 1.7% year over year and declined 14.4% month over month, a typical seasonal shift. Annual new-listing growth occurred in all regions except the South.

    Region

    Active

    Listing

    Count, YoY

    New Listing

    Count, YoY

    Median List

    Price

    Median List

    Price, YoY

    Median List

    Price Per SF, 

    YoY

    Median Days

    on Market, 

    Y-Y (Days)

    Price-

    Reduced

    Share

    Price-Reduced

    Share, Y-Y

    (Percentage

    Points)

    Northeast

    7.0 %

    3.6 %

    $500,000

    0.0 %

    3.9 %

    0

    12.8 %

    0.9

    Midwest

    10.3 %

    2.1 %

    $305,000

    1.7 %

    1.7 %

    0

    18.2 %

    1.7

    South

    14.1 %

    -1.8 %

    $380,000

    -1.3 %

    -1.9 %

    4

    19.1 %

    1.1

    West

    14.3 %

    2.4 %

    $591,090

    -1.5 %

    -1.6 %

    6

    18.5 %

    1.8

    National Average

    12.6 %

    1.7 %

    $415,000

    -0.4 %

    -1.0 %

    3

    18.0 %

    1.3

     

    Metro

    Active

    Listing

    Count YoY

    New

    Listing

    Count,

    YoY

    Median

    List Price

    Median

    List Price, 

    YoY

    Median

    List Price

    Per SF,

    YoY

    Median

    Days on

    Market, Y-

    Y (Days)

    Price

    Reduced

    Share

    Price

    Reduced

    Share, Y-Y

    (Percentage

    Points)

    Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA

    13.0 %

    -0.1 %

    $410,000

    1.1 %

    -0.9 %

    2

    21.4 %

    0.7

    Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos, TX

    8.1 %

    4.3 %

    $479,000

    -4.2 %

    -4.5 %

    4

    24.9 %

    1.6

    Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, MD

    22.8 %

    6.2 %

    $375,000

    4.2 %

    0.6 %

    4

    19.3 %

    2.5

    Birmingham, AL

    11.2 %

    3.8 %

    $298,500

    1.2 %

    0.5 %

    4

    16.5 %

    0.8

    Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH

    21.8 %

    17.1 %

    $785,000

    -4.3 %

    0.1 %

    2

    18.7 %

    3.6

    Buffalo-Cheektowaga, NY

    10.9 %

    23.1 %

    $259,900

    4.0 %

    3.7 %

    4

    10.0 %

    0.6

    Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC

    34.7 %

    4.3 %

    $429,740

    0.2 %

    -1.0 %

    7

    22.7 %

    3.6

    Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN

    -1.5 %

    -12.4 %

    $355,900

    -1.1 %

    0.8 %

    0

    16.0 %

    1.4

    Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN

    17.8 %

    8.6 %

    $335,000

    4.7 %

    2.9 %

    0

    20.3 %

    2.9

    Cleveland, OH

    6.6 %

    -2.0 %

    $250,000

    0.0 %

    4.5 %

    1

    17.6 %

    0.2

    Columbus, OH

    21.1 %

    1.5 %

    $359,900

    0.0 %

    -0.5 %

    3

    27.4 %

    4.8

    Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX

    11.8 %

    0.1 %

    $420,000

    -1.9 %

    -2.1 %

    6

    24.4 %

    1.1

    Denver-Aurora-Centennial, CO

    14.6 %

    10.8 %

    $579,000

    -2.5 %

    -3.1 %

    6

    25.6 %

    2

    Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI

    21.7 %

    3.9 %

    $255,000

    -1.9 %

    -0.5 %

    0

    19.5 %

    4.2

    Grand Rapids-Wyoming-Kentwood, MI

    3.2 %

    10.8 %

    $389,900

    4.0 %

    5.5 %

    -2

    19.7 %

    0.3

    Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, CT

    8.2 %

    1.4 %

    $429,000

    5.6 %

    -0.3 %

    -2

    10.6 %

    1

    Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands, TX

    21.5 %

    1.4 %

    $354,999

    -2.7 %

    -2.0 %

    4

    18.9 %

    1.6

    Indianapolis-Carmel-Greenwood, IN

    24.2 %

    11.2 %

    $315,000

    -0.3 %

    -0.2 %

    2

    28.7 %

    2

    Jacksonville, FL

    -0.8 %

    -6.8 %

    $389,000

    -1.3 %

    -3.3 %

    6

    23.8 %

    0.5

    Kansas City, MO-KS

    15.9 %

    1.9 %

    $375,000

    0.6 %

    1.4 %

    0

    18.5 %

    1.9

    Las Vegas-Henderson-North Las Vegas, NV

    33.0 %

    -1.5 %

    $469,997

    0.0 %

    -2.2 %

    9

    21.3 %

    3.9

    Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA

    13.3 %

    -1.7 %

    $1,085,000

    -4.0 %

    -2.1 %

    5

    12.9 %

    0.7

    Louisville/Jefferson County, KY-IN

    23.6 %

    10.5 %

    $309,900

    0.0 %

    3.7 %

    -1

    21.2 %

    0.2

    Memphis, TN-MS-AR

    9.9 %

    -5.6 %

    $319,000

    -4.4 %

    -2.9 %

    5

    23.2 %

    2.3

    Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL

    8.0 %

    -6.1 %

    $500,000

    -4.8 %

    -2.6 %

    10

    15.4 %

    -1.3

    Milwaukee-Waukesha, WI

    0.6 %

    -0.4 %

    $379,000

    3.8 %

    4.2 %

    1

    17.1 %

    -0.4

    Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI

    6.0 %

    10.7 %

    $410,000

    -2.4 %

    -0.8 %

    -1

    16.8 %

    0.4

    Nashville-Davidson--Murfreesboro--Franklin, TN

    12.0 %

    13.1 %

    $531,664

    -1.5 %

    -0.1 %

    -1

    19.0 %

    2.7

    New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ

    4.0 %

    0.9 %

    $750,000

    -2.3 %

    -3.0 %

    1

    8.6 %

    0.5

    Oklahoma City, OK

    11.5 %

    6.8 %

    $315,995

    1.9 %

    0.2 %

    -3

    21.5 %

    3.2

    Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL

    7.0 %

    1.2 %

    $419,900

    -1.2 %

    -2.3 %

    7

    21.5 %

    0.9

    Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD

    6.3 %

    0.4 %

    $370,000

    -0.7 %

    0.6 %

    0

    16.8 %

    1.7

    Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler, AZ

    18.1 %

    1.0 %

    $489,000

    -5.0 %

    -2.1 %

    7

    28.1 %

    2.1

    Pittsburgh, PA

    5.4 %

    6.4 %

    $245,000

    4.3 %

    3.7 %

    0

    19.2 %

    1.2

    Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA

    12.7 %

    4.9 %

    $589,000

    -1.8 %

    -1.6 %

    7

    25.0 %

    -1.7

    Providence-Warwick, RI-MA

    10.8 %

    -2.1 %

    $550,000

    1.9 %

    3.4 %

    -1

    13.2 %

    -3.8

    Raleigh-Cary, NC

    30.2 %

    9.4 %

    $445,000

    -1.1 %

    -1.5 %

    8

    22.0 %

    4.5

    Richmond, VA

    16.4 %

    -0.3 %

    $426,000

    -0.9 %

    2.1 %

    3

    16.7 %

    1.9

    Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA

    7.7 %

    -2.4 %

    $595,000

    -0.7 %

    -0.7 %

    4

    15.6 %

    1

    Sacramento-Roseville-Folsom, CA

    7.4 %

    1.7 %

    $615,000

    0.0 %

    -1.6 %

    8

    17.3 %

    0.3

    St. Louis, MO-IL

    11.0 %

    8.9 %

    $291,900

    0.7 %

    5.0 %

    -2

    18.0 %

    2.4

    San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX

    15.2 %

    -3.3 %

    $324,900

    -1.5 %

    -3.7 %

    0

    24.6 %

    1.8

    San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, CA

    12.5 %

    -4.4 %

    $915,000

    -5.7 %

    -2.4 %

    2

    17.1 %

    0.2

    San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA

    -0.9 %

    -3.8 %

    $915,000

    -5.6 %

    -5.6 %

    -1

    14.1 %

    1

    San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA

    16.8 %

    -3.1 %

    $1,299,900

    -3.7 %

    -2.3 %

    4

    12.2 %

    3.3

    Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA

    28.4 %

    -8.0 %

    $749,950

    1.3 %

    0.4 %

    5

    18.8 %

    4.5

    Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

    14.8 %

    -15.8 %

    $400,000

    0.0 %

    1.0 %

    4

    24.2 %

    -0.2

    Tucson, AZ

    15.4 %

    4.7 %

    $383,640

    -1.6 %

    -1.5 %

    1

    22.1 %

    4.1

    Virginia Beach-Chesapeake-Norfolk, VA-NC

    7.7 %

    10.3 %

    $400,000

    2.6 %

    2.1 %

    1

    20.2 %

    2.8

    Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV

    32.0 %

    0.4 %

    $575,000

    -2.4 %

    -3.9 %

    5

    17.4 %

    3.8

    Methodology

    Realtor.com housing data as of November 2025. Listings include the active inventory of existing single-family homes and condos/townhomes/row homes/co-ops for the given level of geography on Realtor.com; new construction is excluded unless listed via an MLS that provides listing data to Realtor.com. Realtor.com data history goes back to July 2016. The 50 largest U.S. metropolitan areas as defined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB-202301) and Claritas 2025 estimates of household counts.

    Beginning with our April 2025 report, we have transitioned to a revised national pending home sales data series that applies enhanced cleaning methods to improve consistency and accuracy over time. While the insights and commentary in this report reflect the new series, the downloadable data remains based on our legacy automated pipeline. As a result, there may be slight differences between the report figures and those in the national download file as we transition.

    With the release of its January 2025 housing trends report, Realtor.com® has restated data points for some previous months. As a result of these changes, some of the data released since January 2025 will not be directly comparable with previous data releases (files downloaded before January 2025) and Realtor.com® economics research reports.

    About Realtor.com®

    Realtor.com® pioneered online real estate and has been at the forefront for over 25 years, connecting buyers, sellers, and renters with trusted insights, professional guidance and powerful tools to help them find their perfect home. Recognized as the No. 1 site trusted by real estate professionals, Realtor.com® is a valued partner, delivering consumer connections and a robust suite of marketing tools to support business growth. Realtor.com® is operated by News Corp (NASDAQ:NWS, NWSA]) [ASX: NWS, NWSLV] subsidiary Move, Inc.

    Media contact: Mallory Micetich, [email protected]

    Cision View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/realtorcom-monthly-housing-report-affordability-reshapes-where-americans-can-buy-homes-302634852.html

    SOURCE Realtor.com

    Get the next $NWS alert in real time by email

    Crush Q1 2026 with the Best AI Superconnector

    Stay ahead of the competition with Standout.work - your AI-powered talent-to-startup matching platform.

    AI-Powered Inbox
    Context-aware email replies
    Strategic Decision Support
    Get Started with Standout.work

    Recent Analyst Ratings for
    $NWS
    $NWSA

    CompanyDatePrice TargetRatingAnalyst
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    8/6/2025Outperform → Neutral
    Macquarie
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    2/4/2025Neutral → Buy
    UBS
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    1/10/2025$36.00Buy
    Citigroup
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    2/8/2024Neutral → Outperform
    Macquarie
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    8/16/2023$27.50Overweight
    Morgan Stanley
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    1/25/2023$17.00 → $25.00Hold → Buy
    Loop Capital
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    10/17/2022$30.00 → $17.00Buy → Hold
    Loop Capital
    News Corporation
    $NWSA
    7/28/2022$21.10Outperform → Neutral
    Macquarie
    More analyst ratings

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    SEC Filings

    View All

    News Corporation filed SEC Form 8-K: Other Events, Financial Statements and Exhibits

    8-K - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Filer)

    2/25/26 8:30:03 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    News Corporation filed SEC Form 8-K: Other Events, Financial Statements and Exhibits

    8-K - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Filer)

    2/23/26 8:04:37 AM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    News Corporation filed SEC Form 8-K: Other Events, Financial Statements and Exhibits

    8-K - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Filer)

    2/19/26 8:05:57 AM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Insider Trading

    Insider transactions reveal critical sentiment about the company from key stakeholders. See them live in this feed.

    View All

    Director Siddiqui Masroor converted options into 2,371 shares and returned $62,096 worth of shares to the company (2,371 units at $26.19) (SEC Form 4)

    4 - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Issuer)

    1/5/26 4:27:41 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Director Murdoch Lachlan K converted options into 2,371 shares and returned $62,096 worth of shares to the company (2,371 units at $26.19) (SEC Form 4)

    4 - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Issuer)

    1/5/26 4:27:29 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Director Pessoa Ana Paula returned $62,096 worth of shares to the company (2,371 units at $26.19) and converted options into 2,371 shares (SEC Form 4)

    4 - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Issuer)

    1/5/26 4:27:35 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Insider Purchases

    Insider purchases reveal critical bullish sentiment about the company from key stakeholders. See them live in this feed.

    View All

    Large owner Lgc Holdco, Llc bought 7,125 shares and bought 24,256,641 units of Class B Common Stock, increasing direct ownership by 878,280% to 62,584,577 units (SEC Form 4)

    4 - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Issuer)

    9/12/25 4:38:41 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Press Releases

    Fastest customizable press release news feed in the world

    View All

    Out-of-Town Shoppers Now Drive Demand in 87 of the Largest U.S. Markets, Realtor.com® Reports

    Interest from out-of-market buyers has seen a structural shift since 2019, accounting for 61.9% of home views in Q4 2025AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 26, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Cross-market home shopping continued to dominate the U.S. housing landscape in the final quarter of 2025. According to a new report from Realtor.com®, out-of-market shoppers accounted for 61.9% of online views for homes in the 100 largest metros, which is a significant shift from the 48.6% seen in the pre-pandemic era of 2019. While this search activity is down modestly from last year's 64.7% peak, the long-term trend highlights a more mobile and interconnected pool of home shoppers. Today, 87 of the largest 100 metros are driven

    2/26/26 6:00:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    News Corp to Participate in the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference

    News Corp announced today that Chief Executive Robert Thomson will participate in the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on Monday, March 2, 2026. The session will begin at 1:00 PM EST (10:00 AM PST). To listen to the live webcast, please visit the News Corp website at https://investors.newscorp.com/calendar-events. A replay of the webcast is expected to be available at the same location for a period of time following the conference. About News Corp News Corp (NASDAQ:NWS, NWSA, ASX: NWS, NWSLV)) is a global, diversified media and information services company focused on creating and distributing authoritative and engaging content and other products and services. The co

    2/24/26 9:00:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Higher Rates Changed The Housing Market and These May Be the Rules Going Forward, New Realtor.com® Report

    Housing Market Defined by New Dynamics, Where Higher Rates, Uneven Supply and High Prices Coexist, Challenging Affordability AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- January 2026 marks four years since interest rates started rising and created a shift that fundamentally altered how the U.S. housing market functions. A new report from Realtor.com® finds that the reset some expected never fully materialized. While higher mortgage rates did cool demand and bring more homes to market, they failed to deliver broad price relief, leaving affordability strained and market dynamics behaving differently than in the past. Four years into the high-rate era, the data suggest the housing market may be

    2/23/26 6:00:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Analyst Ratings

    Analyst ratings in real time. Analyst ratings have a very high impact on the underlying stock. See them live in this feed.

    View All

    News Corp. downgraded by Macquarie

    Macquarie downgraded News Corp. from Outperform to Neutral

    8/6/25 12:18:13 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    News Corp. upgraded by UBS

    UBS upgraded News Corp. from Neutral to Buy

    2/4/25 8:06:20 AM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Citigroup initiated coverage on News Corp. with a new price target

    Citigroup initiated coverage of News Corp. with a rating of Buy and set a new price target of $36.00

    1/10/25 8:35:41 AM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Leadership Updates

    Live Leadership Updates

    View All

    Ben Levisohn Appointed Editor in Chief of Barron's

    Dow Jones announced today the appointment of Ben Levisohn to editor in chief of Barron's. Levisohn, a 15-year veteran of the company, most recently served as the senior managing editor for the financial publication and was the driving force behind last year's launch of Barron's Investor Circle, a new premium experience for readers. He is based in the newsroom's New York headquarters. "Ben takes the helm at a time when investor interest in markets and Barron's is stronger than ever," said Almar Latour, CEO of Dow Jones. "As both a veteran financial editor and a veteran of financial markets–as well as the creator of many highly successful new initiatives for the brand–Ben is uniquely well p

    2/11/26 1:00:00 PM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Realtor.com® Unveils Realtor.com®+™: A First-of-Its-Kind Collaborative Home Search Experience

    The platform is now live for Canopy MLS with 16 total MLS agreements signed and going live soonLive and signed agreements represent over 122,000 professionalsThe largest multi-MLS, co-branded portal collaboration of its kind since online data sharing began, keeping MLSs and professionals at the heart of the real estate ecosystemSigned integrations with leading agent and MLS technology providers, including Realtors Property Resource®, Docusign and HoverAUSTIN, Texas, Jan. 21, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Realtor.com® today announced the public debut of Realtor.com®+™, (pronounced "plus"), a collaborative home search platform built in collaboration with MLSs that helps real estate professionals and co

    1/21/26 11:00:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Realtor.com® Rent Report: Rental Affordability Improves for Minimum Wage Earners

    Nationwide, rents continue to fall. The national average across the top 50 metro areas slipped to $1,693, down 1.0% from last November. AUSTIN, Texas, Dec. 16, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Across the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the United States, the median asking rent for 0–2 bedroom units fell for the 28th consecutive month on a year-over-year basis, according to the Realtor.com® November Rental Report. The national median rent now stands at $1,693, down $17 (or 1.0%) from last November. While this marks modest relief since the post-pandemic peak, rents remain 17.2% higher than in November 2019, keeping affordability challenges in the spotlight. The cooling trend, coupled with state and loca

    12/16/25 6:00:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Financials

    Live finance-specific insights

    View All

    News Corporation Reports Second Quarter Results for Fiscal 2026

    FISCAL 2026 SECOND QUARTER KEY FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Second quarter revenues were $2.36 billion, a 6% increase compared to $2.24 billion in the prior year, driven by growth at the Dow Jones, Digital Real Estate Services and Book Publishing segments Net income from continuing operations in the quarter was $242 million, a 21% decrease compared to $306 million in the prior year, which benefited from an $87 million favorable gain on REA Group's sale of PropertyGuru last year Second quarter Total Segment EBITDA was $521 million, a 9% increase compared to $478 million in the prior year. Results include a $16 million one-time write-off primarily related to inventory at HarperCollins' inter

    2/5/26 4:15:00 PM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    News Corporation Reports First Quarter Results for Fiscal 2026

    FISCAL 2026 FIRST QUARTER KEY FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS First quarter revenues were $2.14 billion, a 2% increase compared to $2.10 billion in the prior year, driven by growth at the Dow Jones and Digital Real Estate Services segments, while net income from continuing operations in the quarter was $150 million, a 1% increase compared to $149 million in the prior year First quarter Total Segment EBITDA was $340 million, a 5% increase compared to $325 million in the prior year For the quarter, reported EPS from continuing operations were $0.20 as compared to $0.21 in the prior year - Adjusted EPS were $0.22 compared to $0.20 in the prior year Dow Jones revenues for the quarter were $586 mil

    11/6/25 4:15:00 PM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Dow Jones Acquires Eco-Movement

    Latest acquisition advances Dow Jones's energy business with industry-leading data Dow Jones today announced it has acquired Eco-Movement, a leading global platform for EV charging station data. Eco-Movement will operate as part of OPIS, Dow Jones's growing energy business. Headquartered in Utrecht, Netherlands, Eco-Movement is a leading charge point data platform. The company collects, optimizes and enriches EV charging station data, and has built an extensive data platform with public and semi-public EV charging points and their real-time availability. Its platform features almost 2 million connectors across more than 80 countries and adds to Dow Jones's suite of energy products and s

    9/18/25 9:50:00 AM ET
    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    $NWS
    $NWSA
    Large Ownership Changes

    This live feed shows all institutional transactions in real time.

    View All

    Amendment: SEC Form SC 13G/A filed by News Corporation

    SC 13G/A - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Subject)

    11/14/24 1:22:35 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Amendment: SEC Form SC 13G/A filed by News Corporation

    SC 13G/A - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Subject)

    11/13/24 4:22:31 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary

    Amendment: SEC Form SC 13G/A filed by News Corporation

    SC 13G/A - NEWS CORP (0001564708) (Subject)

    11/13/24 4:22:54 PM ET
    $NWSA
    Newspapers/Magazines
    Consumer Discretionary