Phoenix was the nation’s hottest market in September
Phoenix was the nation's hottest market, registering a 33.1% price increase. It was followed by Tampa (where prices rose 27.7%) and Miami (25.2%). All 20 cities reported double-digit increases.
Phoenix was the nation's hottest market, registering a 33.1% price increase. It was followed by Tampa (where prices rose 27.7%) and Miami (25.2%). All 20 cities reported double-digit increases.
In this story published Nov. 30, 2021, on Fronteras Desk:
It may actually begin to affect our economic expansion if employers can't attract employees because they can't find good quality places they can afford to live.
– Mark Stapp, executive director of the Master of Real Estate Development program and Fred E. Taylor Professor in Real Estate
Latest news
- $35 million NASPO gift advances procurement and ASU's global leadership in supply chain management
The historic commitment from the National Association of State Procurement Officials establishes…
- AI research earns triple honors
Assistant Professor of Information Systems Tian Lu recognized with three INFORMS awards for…
- After NHL exit, W. P. Carey alums advocate for the future of Arizona hockey
Olympian Lyndsey Fry (MBA '18) and Garrett Niederkorn (BS Management Entrepreneurship '15, MBA '…