
By Rick Tobin
How are so many asset prices (homes, commercial real estate, gold, stocks, etc.) today at or near all-time record highs, while the purchasing power of the dollar is at all-time record lows? Is the economy booming like never before or is the dollar’s purchasing power seemingly crashing and burning?
A recently published Statista Consumer Insights survey that was conducted in June and July 2025 found that 49% of U.S. adult respondents said that the high cost of living was their biggest daily concern.
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The Top 8 answers provided in this survey of 4,098 adults between the ages of 18 and 64 were as follows:
1. Cost of living – 49.1%
2. Physical health – 26.3%
3. Mental health – 26.0%
4. Work-life balance – 25.8%
5. Political or social issues – 22.7%
6. Age-related concerns – 16.7%
7. Housing – 16.6%
8. Career dissatisfaction or uncertainty – 16.2%
Why does it seem that many items are less affordable today than in previous years? One answer is that our dollar’s purchasing power continues to rapidly decline at an accelerating pace.
Dollar’s Purchasing Power Turns to Ash

The federal government’s published inflation rates in 2025 are still lower than inflation rates back in the 2021/2022 years that peaked near 9%. However, it sure doesn’t seem like our dollar buys the same amount of goods and services here in 2025 whether or not the published inflation rates are 2%, 3%, 4%, 5%, 9%, or 10%.
Here’s a summary of the decline of the dollar over the past 112 years:
- $1 in 1913 (the year when the Federal Reserve was formed, ironically, as a way to “contain inflation” and “stabilize the dollar”) now has the equivalent purchasing power of almost 3 cents today.
- The purchasing power of $1 fell to about 7 cents over the past 50 years, so most of the dollar’s decline in value has taken place during this 50-year time period that followed the removal of the dollar from the gold standard during the 1971-1973 years.
- Since 2000, the dollar’s purchasing power has dropped by -41%.
- The M1 money supply (cash or cash equivalent) increased from $4 trillion dollars in January 2020 to $20 trillion dollars by October 2021. The more money in circulation, the less purchasing power for the dollar.
- The dollar’s purchasing power has fallen 10% in the first seven months of 2025 as the dollar’s losses are accelerating.
- Because real estate has proven to be an exceptional hedge against inflation and an imploding dollar or fiat currency that’s backed by “thin air,” these are key reasons why home values today are near all-time record highs.
Falling Rates & New Buying Opportunities

The average 30-year fixed rate over the past 50 years was about 7.7%, which is actually much higher than today’s 30-year fixed rate average that is almost 1.5% lower as of the first week in September 2025.
The peak high 30-year fixed rate over the past 50 years reached 18.63% in October 1981, while the low rate average fell to 2.65% in January 2021.
On September 5, 2025, the 30-year fixed rate reached a 6.29% rate average, as per Mortgage News Daily and CNBC. This rate was near the lowest 30-year fixed rate average dating back to October 2024.
Even if the Fed takes short term rates down to near zero again like in past years, the 10-year Treasury yield may still increase due to factors such as fewer foreign buyers for our Treasury bonds, rising federal debt, and potential future credit downgrades by credit rating agencies such as Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, and Fitch.
To learn more details about potential interest rate directions, please read my article published on August 8, 2025: Are Lower Rates on the Horizon?
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Commercial Real Estate Trends
Each commercial asset class like multifamily, industrial, office, retail, and mixed-use across our nation has both positive and negative trends.
For some commercial properties owned by fortunate landlords, they may see 100% occupancy rates, record high rents, and all-time peak high property values. For other property owners, they may experience high vacancy rates, negative cash flow, and upside-side down values because their mortgage debt exceeds their current market value.
Let’s take a look below at some of the latest commercial real estate trends:
- The estimated total dollar value of commercial real estate was $22.5 trillion as of Q4 2023, which makes it the fourth-largest asset class in the nation following stocks, residential real estate, and Treasury securities. (Federal Reserve’s April 2024 Financial Stability Report)
- By July 2024, the national office vacancy rate reached a whopping 20.1%. This was the first time ever that the U.S. vacancy rate surpassed 20%. (CommercialEdge)
- By early 2026, Moody’s forecasts office vacancy rates hitting 24%+.
- In August 2025, the delinquency rate for office mortgages securitized into commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) spiked to 11.7%, the worst ever default rate and a full percentage point above even the peak meltdown rate of the Financial Crisis (10.7%) during the 2008 to 2012 years, according to data by Trepp.
- Almost 45% of all office buildings nationwide that are leveraged with debt are upside-down or underwater where the existing mortgage debt exceeds the current market value, per Bloomberg and Morgan Stanley.
- To learn more details, please read my Are You Focused on Commercial Real Estate article.
Ballooning Commercial Loans & Motivated Sellers

Unlike most residential one-to-four unit properties that have 30-year fixed rate terms, most commercial properties have shorter term mortgages that may only last for a few years before they balloon or mature and must be paid off or refinanced.
Let’s review the ballooning commercial mortgage numbers below:
- Approximately 20%, or $929 billion, of the $4.7 trillion dollars’ worth of outstanding commercial mortgages owed to lenders and investors were scheduled to balloon or become all due and payable by the end of 2024, as per the Mortgage Bankers Association’s 2023 Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Survey of Loan Maturity Volumes.
- However, many of these ballooning loans were extended well beyond their maturity date because banks don’t want to acknowledge all of their current financial losses, just like back during the 2008 to 2012 era, or their bank’s stock value may go “pop.”
- Upwards of $2.7 trillion for commercial and multifamily mortgages are set to balloon or mature by the end of 2026. (Mortgage Bankers Association)
- In 2024, the U.S. apartment construction industry was expected to break a new all-time record for apartment units delivered with well over 500,000 units completed, which is 30% higher than back in 2022. (Fannie Mae)
- When apartment unit supply exceeds tenant demand, rents and values tend to fall.
- The rising multifamily apartment loan default rate is increasing due to a combination of rising adjustable rates that are resetting after 3, 5, or 7-years and skyrocketing insurance costs that creates negative cash flow.
- The largest issuers for these ballooning commercial loans are community banks and thrifts that hold over half of these maturing loans through 2028.
- Realloans offers interest-only and asset-based, no income verification commercial property loans with up to 30-year terms for most property types.
The Importance of Income-Producing Assets

Nearly 60% of Americans say they live paycheck to paycheck, according to surveys published by LendingClub.
Wealth distribution has become increasingly concentrated in the hands of fewer people since 1990. Overall, the top 10% of wealthiest Americans own more than the bottom 90% combined, with more than $95 trillion in wealth for the top 10%.
U.S. homeowners are 43 times wealthier than tenants. The average homeowner at retirement age has 83% of their net worth tied up in their main home.
The average age of a first-time homebuyer in the U.S. is 38, while it’s 49 here in California due to much higher prices, as per the National Association of Realtors.
The average U.S. home seller age in 2024 was 63. For many of these sellers, they first took a risky chance and bought their home more than 30 years earlier in their early 30s or late 20s.

The average homeowner at retirement age has 83% of their net worth tied up in their main home. Unless you’re in the Top 1%, the odds are quite high that the bulk of your wealth is concentrated in real estate if you’re fortunate enough to own now.
The average Social Security benefit here in 2025 is $1,976/mo. ($23,712/yr.), per Kiplinger.
The fastest growing demographic percentage increase in the workforce in 2024 was over the age of 75 because Social Security and pensions aren’t high enough, according to Pew Research.
Either you work hard for your money or you let your money or investments work hard for you when you’re awake or asleep. Yes, investing can be scary, but so can the thought of not having enough monthly income to cover your debts.
To be able to actually retire these days, many people need some form of income-producing assets creating monthly cash flow for them. It’s much riskier to do nothing today than to start investing as soon as possible.
The best time to start investing is now. Your future self and your family will later thank you.

Rick Tobin
Rick Tobin has worked in the real estate, financial, investment, and writing fields for the past 30+ years. He’s held eight (8) different real estate, securities, and mortgage brokerage licenses to date and is a graduate of the University of Southern California. He provides creative residential and commercial mortgage solutions for clients across the nation. He’s also written college textbooks and real estate licensing courses in most states for the two largest real estate publishers in the nation; the oldest real estate school in California; and the first online real estate school in California. Please visit his website at Realloans.com for financing options and his new investment group at So-Cal Real Estate Investors for more details.
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