BREAKING: China’s ENTIRE Housing Market Just Collapsed

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CHINA'S HOUSING MARKET HAS BEEN WIPED OUT
China's housing market has now erased roughly 20 years of gains, with home prices falling for 35 consecutive months and an estimated $18 trillion in household wealth disappearing. In a country where housing represented nearly 70% of household wealth, the impact has been enormous and is reshaping the entire economy.

HOW CHINA CREATED A HOUSING BUBBLE
For decades, real estate became the primary way Chinese families built wealth. Stock markets were viewed as risky, bank deposits paid little, and strict capital controls limited overseas investing. As a result, housing evolved into far more than shelter. It became a retirement account, status symbol, safety net, and investment vehicle all at once.

Rapid urbanization, easy credit, and rising incomes created a powerful feedback loop. Homeownership surged to around 90%, prices rose nearly 700% between 2001 and 2017, and real estate eventually accounted for roughly a quarter of China's economy. At the peak, many buyers were paying over 20 times their annual income for homes, often purchasing multiple properties and even pre-buying apartments that had not yet been built.

WHAT CAUSED THE COLLAPSE
By 2020, Chinese policymakers recognized the market had become dangerously overleveraged. Beijing introduced the "Three Red Lines" policy, sharply limiting how much developers could borrow. The move effectively shut off financing overnight.

Developers like Evergrande and Country Garden quickly ran into trouble, eventually defaulting on massive debts. Millions of unfinished apartments were left in limbo, leaving buyers making mortgage payments on homes that might never be completed. Confidence collapsed, buyers stopped purchasing, developers lost funding, and the same feedback loop that drove prices higher for two decades suddenly worked in reverse.

WHY THE ECONOMIC DAMAGE IS SO SEVERE
The problem extends far beyond housing. Real estate is tied to roughly 15% of Chinese employment, while land sales historically generated as much as 40% of local government revenue. Falling home prices therefore create multiple shocks simultaneously: a wealth shock, a spending shock, a jobs shock, and a government revenue shock.

China also faces structural headwinds including an aging population, lower marriage rates, slower urbanization, and millions of empty or unfinished homes. Even with aggressive government intervention, analysts still expect prices to decline further before potentially stabilizing.

HOW THIS AFFECTS THE UNITED STATES
China's collapse is unlikely to become another 2008-style crisis for America because U.S. banks have limited direct exposure. However, there are important indirect effects.

A weaker Chinese consumer hurts multinational companies that depend on Chinese demand, potentially weighing on stock market earnings. Slower Chinese construction also reduces global demand for commodities like steel, copper, and energy, while weaker domestic demand could push China to export more goods abroad, increasing trade tensions.

Ironically, China's weakness may also strengthen the U.S. dollar, as global investors often move toward American assets during periods of uncertainty.

COULD THE SAME THING HAPPEN HERE?
While some U.S. housing headlines appear concerning, the underlying conditions are very different. First, Americans have far less of their wealth concentrated in housing. Second, the U.S. still suffers from a housing shortage rather than massive oversupply. Third, most homeowners are locked into low fixed-rate mortgages and hold substantial equity, meaning very few people are forced to sell.

THE REAL LESSON
China's collapse is ultimately a lesson about concentration risk. Any asset can become dangerous when too much wealth depends on it continuing to rise forever. The biggest takeaway is simple: diversify, avoid relying entirely on one investment, and remember that no asset class rises forever.

00:00 - China’s Failing Housing Market
01:37 - China’s Housing Bubble
04:13 - The Housing Reset
06:35 - Diversification With SoFi
08:16 - Major Housing Losses
10:09 - The Global Fallout
12:44 - The Housing Cycle
15:16 - What Happens Next

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