April 2026 Fed Interest Rates & Housing Shortage: What It Means for Investors

The Federal Reserve

For months, the market has awaited rate cuts, which have not yet arrived, and increasingly, seem not to be coming anytime soon.

The Federal Reserve is holding rates in the 3.5% to 3.75% range, and expectations for cuts continue to get pushed back. Some institutions are now projecting few or no cuts in 2026.

Simultaneously, inflation remains above the Fed’s 2% target, and treasury yield expectations are creeping higher. External pressures, like energy prices and geopolitical instability, continue to add uncertainty.

The Problem: Investors Are Stuck in Uncertain Markets

On the surface, the market appears stable. Savings accounts and CDs are yielding ~4 to 5%, the economy is still expanding and public markets remain active.

But underneath, investor behavior is shifting.

Returns Are Stalling in Real Terms

With inflation still elevated, 4 to 5% yields are barely keeping pace, in turn, limiting real wealth creation.

Public Markets Lack Predictability

Equities continue reacting to inflation data, rate expectations and global instability, resulting in inconsistent performance and lower conviction.

The Middle Ground Has Disappeared

Today’s environment presents a clear tradeoff, where safer investments yield low returns, and higher returns seem only possible with volatile or uncertain opportunities.

That gap leaves many investors with no clear allocation strategy.

Due to lack of compelling alternatives, high-income investors are holding significant capital in cash positions, brokerage accounts and retirement vehicles.

The Structural Reality: U.S. Housing Shortage

New construction

While interest rates dominate headlines, the core driver of real estate value remains supply.

Supply remains structurally constrained, as the U.S. Is underbuilt by millions of homes:

  • Realtor.com estimates the U.S. housing shortage at ~4.03 million homes (2026)
  • National Association of Home Builders estimates a structural shortage of ~1.2 million units
  • National Low Income Housing Coalition reports a 7.2 million unit shortage in affordable housing alone
  • Broader estimates cited in policy discussions suggest the total deficit could reach up to 10 million homes, depending on methodology

Despite variation in methodology, the conclusion is that the U.S. does not have enough housing.

The Shortage Persists in a Slower Market

Recent data (sources listed below) shows that existing home sales have declined, yet inventory remains tight.

Although buyer demand has slowed, supply has not meaningfully improved. The market is slowing due to constrained supply conditions, rather than oversupply.

Supply Remains the Long-Term Driver

Housing markets are ultimately governed by a simple dynamic:

When supply is constrained and population demand continues, prices and demand resilience follow.

This results in rising home prices, cautiously optimistic builders and long-term housing fundamentals remaining intact.

What the Housing Shortage Means for Real Estate Investors

This combination of a supply-constrained environment with elevated financing costs, makes for a non-traditional real estate cycle.

This type of environment filters weak operators and rewards disciplined, execution-focused strategies.

In this market, success is driven by entry price discipline, cost control, buyer targeting and execution speed.

Where Novacrest Fits

Novacrest is positioned within a specific gap created by this environment.

Between low-yield traditional fixed income and higher-risk, market-dependent investments, our approach focuses on:

  • Structured real estate-backed investments
  • Passive income generation through quarterly distributions
  • Fixed-income returns
  • Execution-driven performance
  • Performing without dependence on market timing

Novacrest not only diversifies an investor’s portfolio, but also allocates to income-producing strategies that function in today’s conditions.

The Bigger Shift: From Speculation to Income

For years, markets rewarded growth, multiple expansion and long-term upside.

Now that our environment has shifted, today’s markets reward:

  • Cash flow
  • Strong underwriting
  • Margin discipline
  • Consistency of execution

The Fed holding rates is accelerating a broader shift in investor behavior, forcing a decision between remaining in low-yield, low-conviction positions and moving into strategies designed to produce income now.

Why Novacrest’s Strategy Holds Up in Today’s Market

As established earlier, higher rates, slower transaction volume and inflation don’t stop real estate, but remove weak operators.

Novacrest’s strategy is built to operate in today’s environment and does not depend on a favorable one.

No Reliance on Rate-Sensitive Buyers

Our buyers (cash buyers, move-up buyers, out-of-state buyers, and working professionals) are less dependent on financing, which helps stabilize demand even as rates remain elevated.

We Build in High-Demand Markets

We focus on areas with population growth and sustained housing demand, ensuring a consistent buyer pool.

We Price to Move

We underwrite with conservative pricing, built-in margins and flexibility for incentives, which allows us to maintain velocity, rather than await market appreciation.

Internal Execution

As the builder, we control costs, timelines, pricing and exit strategy.

Execution in the Diversified Real Estate Fund is internally underwritten and managed.

We Plan for Current Conditions

We do not assume falling interest rates, rapid appreciation, or ideal market conditions.

Each deal is structured to perform in today’s environment.

The Bottom Line

The market today is defined by two realities: rates remain higher long-term, and housing supply is structurally constrained.

This combination reshapes how capital is deployed and creates a clear separation between passive investing and execution-driven strategies.

Novacrest is built for today’s environment as a solution for investors seeking consistent, income-producing opportunities, backed by real assets.

Book a call with us today and bring your questions to our concierge team.

Sources

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/citigroup-pushes-back-fed-rate-cut-timeline-after-strong-job-numbers-2026-04-06/

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-treasury-yield-forecasts-creep-up-strategists-cling-benign-inflation-view-2026-04-09/

The Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/buyside/personal-finance/banking/high-yield-savings-rates-today-4-9-2026

The Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/buyside/personal-finance/banking/cd-rates-today-4-9-2026

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-existing-home-sales-drop-nine-month-low-march-amid-tight-supply-2026-04-13/

Realtor: https://www.realtor.com/research/us-housing-supply-gap-2026/

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-housing-supply-gap-widens-further-2025-realtorcom-says-2026-03-03/

National Association of Home Builders: https://www.nahb.org/news-and-economics/press-releases/2026/02/2026-housing-outlook-ongoing-challenges-cautious-optimism-and-incremental-gains

Eye On Housing: https://eyeonhousing.org/2026/02/the-size-of-the-housing-shortage-2024-data/

Window & Door: https://www.windowanddoor.com/article/2026-housing-market-outlook

National Low Income Housing Coalition: https://nlihc.org/news/nlihc-releases-gap-2026-shortage-affordable-homes

AP News: https://apnews.com/article/53aee15e8a48b930f286b19475b861ac

NY Post: https://nypost.com/2026/04/13/real-estate/growing-national-debt-may-be-keeping-mortgage-rates-high-and-housing-expensive/

NY Post: https://nypost.com/2026/03/03/real-estate/heres-why-gen-z-and-millennials-disappeared-from-the-housing-market-in-2025/

Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/02/04/us-housing-shortage-millions/

April 2026 Fed Interest Rates & Housing Shortage: What It Means for Investors

April 15, 2026
By: Angelina L, Marketing & PR
The Federal Reserve

For months, the market has awaited rate cuts, which have not yet arrived, and increasingly, seem not to be coming anytime soon.

The Federal Reserve is holding rates in the 3.5% to 3.75% range, and expectations for cuts continue to get pushed back. Some institutions are now projecting few or no cuts in 2026.

Simultaneously, inflation remains above the Fed’s 2% target, and treasury yield expectations are creeping higher. External pressures, like energy prices and geopolitical instability, continue to add uncertainty.

The Problem: Investors Are Stuck in Uncertain Markets

On the surface, the market appears stable. Savings accounts and CDs are yielding ~4 to 5%, the economy is still expanding and public markets remain active.

But underneath, investor behavior is shifting.

Returns Are Stalling in Real Terms

With inflation still elevated, 4 to 5% yields are barely keeping pace, in turn, limiting real wealth creation.

Public Markets Lack Predictability

Equities continue reacting to inflation data, rate expectations and global instability, resulting in inconsistent performance and lower conviction.

The Middle Ground Has Disappeared

Today’s environment presents a clear tradeoff, where safer investments yield low returns, and higher returns seem only possible with volatile or uncertain opportunities.

That gap leaves many investors with no clear allocation strategy.

Due to lack of compelling alternatives, high-income investors are holding significant capital in cash positions, brokerage accounts and retirement vehicles.

The Structural Reality: U.S. Housing Shortage

New construction

While interest rates dominate headlines, the core driver of real estate value remains supply.

Supply remains structurally constrained, as the U.S. Is underbuilt by millions of homes:

  • Realtor.com estimates the U.S. housing shortage at ~4.03 million homes (2026)
  • National Association of Home Builders estimates a structural shortage of ~1.2 million units
  • National Low Income Housing Coalition reports a 7.2 million unit shortage in affordable housing alone
  • Broader estimates cited in policy discussions suggest the total deficit could reach up to 10 million homes, depending on methodology

Despite variation in methodology, the conclusion is that the U.S. does not have enough housing.

The Shortage Persists in a Slower Market

Recent data (sources listed below) shows that existing home sales have declined, yet inventory remains tight.

Although buyer demand has slowed, supply has not meaningfully improved. The market is slowing due to constrained supply conditions, rather than oversupply.

Supply Remains the Long-Term Driver

Housing markets are ultimately governed by a simple dynamic:

When supply is constrained and population demand continues, prices and demand resilience follow.

This results in rising home prices, cautiously optimistic builders and long-term housing fundamentals remaining intact.

What the Housing Shortage Means for Real Estate Investors

This combination of a supply-constrained environment with elevated financing costs, makes for a non-traditional real estate cycle.

This type of environment filters weak operators and rewards disciplined, execution-focused strategies.

In this market, success is driven by entry price discipline, cost control, buyer targeting and execution speed.

Where Novacrest Fits

Novacrest is positioned within a specific gap created by this environment.

Between low-yield traditional fixed income and higher-risk, market-dependent investments, our approach focuses on:

  • Structured real estate-backed investments
  • Passive income generation through quarterly distributions
  • Fixed-income returns
  • Execution-driven performance
  • Performing without dependence on market timing

Novacrest not only diversifies an investor’s portfolio, but also allocates to income-producing strategies that function in today’s conditions.

The Bigger Shift: From Speculation to Income

For years, markets rewarded growth, multiple expansion and long-term upside.

Now that our environment has shifted, today’s markets reward:

  • Cash flow
  • Strong underwriting
  • Margin discipline
  • Consistency of execution

The Fed holding rates is accelerating a broader shift in investor behavior, forcing a decision between remaining in low-yield, low-conviction positions and moving into strategies designed to produce income now.

Why Novacrest’s Strategy Holds Up in Today’s Market

As established earlier, higher rates, slower transaction volume and inflation don’t stop real estate, but remove weak operators.

Novacrest’s strategy is built to operate in today’s environment and does not depend on a favorable one.

No Reliance on Rate-Sensitive Buyers

Our buyers (cash buyers, move-up buyers, out-of-state buyers, and working professionals) are less dependent on financing, which helps stabilize demand even as rates remain elevated.

We Build in High-Demand Markets

We focus on areas with population growth and sustained housing demand, ensuring a consistent buyer pool.

We Price to Move

We underwrite with conservative pricing, built-in margins and flexibility for incentives, which allows us to maintain velocity, rather than await market appreciation.

Internal Execution

As the builder, we control costs, timelines, pricing and exit strategy.

Execution in the Diversified Real Estate Fund is internally underwritten and managed.

We Plan for Current Conditions

We do not assume falling interest rates, rapid appreciation, or ideal market conditions.

Each deal is structured to perform in today’s environment.

The Bottom Line

The market today is defined by two realities: rates remain higher long-term, and housing supply is structurally constrained.

This combination reshapes how capital is deployed and creates a clear separation between passive investing and execution-driven strategies.

Novacrest is built for today’s environment as a solution for investors seeking consistent, income-producing opportunities, backed by real assets.

Book a call with us today and bring your questions to our concierge team.

Sources

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/citigroup-pushes-back-fed-rate-cut-timeline-after-strong-job-numbers-2026-04-06/

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-treasury-yield-forecasts-creep-up-strategists-cling-benign-inflation-view-2026-04-09/

The Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/buyside/personal-finance/banking/high-yield-savings-rates-today-4-9-2026

The Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/buyside/personal-finance/banking/cd-rates-today-4-9-2026

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-existing-home-sales-drop-nine-month-low-march-amid-tight-supply-2026-04-13/

Realtor: https://www.realtor.com/research/us-housing-supply-gap-2026/

Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-housing-supply-gap-widens-further-2025-realtorcom-says-2026-03-03/

National Association of Home Builders: https://www.nahb.org/news-and-economics/press-releases/2026/02/2026-housing-outlook-ongoing-challenges-cautious-optimism-and-incremental-gains

Eye On Housing: https://eyeonhousing.org/2026/02/the-size-of-the-housing-shortage-2024-data/

Window & Door: https://www.windowanddoor.com/article/2026-housing-market-outlook

National Low Income Housing Coalition: https://nlihc.org/news/nlihc-releases-gap-2026-shortage-affordable-homes

AP News: https://apnews.com/article/53aee15e8a48b930f286b19475b861ac

NY Post: https://nypost.com/2026/04/13/real-estate/growing-national-debt-may-be-keeping-mortgage-rates-high-and-housing-expensive/

NY Post: https://nypost.com/2026/03/03/real-estate/heres-why-gen-z-and-millennials-disappeared-from-the-housing-market-in-2025/

Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/02/04/us-housing-shortage-millions/