With inflation still elevated, home prices parked near record highs, and insurance costs climbing, more homeowners are running out of cushion—heightening the risk of mortgage delinquencies, as well as broader ripple effects on consumer spending and credit conditions. As budgets thin, questions about the sustainability of homeownership and the broader economic fallout are getting harder to ignore. In the 2025 edition of its Cities With the Most Mortgage Delinquencies report, Construction Coverage analyzed the latest data from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Census Bureau, and Zillow to reveal the locations with the greatest percentage of mortgages at least 30 days delinquent as of December 2024.
Each election year Citizens Count sends an issue survey to every candidate for state and federal office in New Hampshire. They make every atte…
On Wednesday, we received the much-anticipated Federal Reserve decision to slash its key overnight borrowing rate by a half percent point or 5…
New Hampshire’s housing market has been hitting the national airwaves and the Granite State has been picking up recognition when you compare i…
In a packed Republican primary for the 1st Congressional District, an engineer and former Executive Councilor is leading in the polls, but mos…
The government measures all sorts of consumer behavior: consumer spending, consumer confidence, consumer sentiment. The business pages are fil…
