It’s the season for housing market predictions, and we all know who to name! Altos Analysis and HousingWire’s Mike Simonsen joins the present to share the place his crew thinks mortgage charges, residence costs, housing stock, and purchaser demand shall be in 2025. Yearly, the HousingWire crew places collectively an exceptional housing market forecast, concerning the subjects traders, brokers, lenders, and housing nerds care about whereas recapping the wildest surprises of the yr prior.
Will mortgage charges lastly fall under six % in 2025? Will residence costs dip with housing stock up a considerable share year-over-year? And will brokers and lenders lastly get some reduction with residence gross sales, or will we nonetheless see sluggish buying and purchaser exercise? To not spoil it, however Mike is optimistic in regards to the 2025 housing market and what is going to come over the subsequent twelve months.
Mike breaks down every prediction and what might have an effect on YOU essentially the most, whether or not you’re shopping for or promoting houses. Plus, he shares the one metric his crew is watching fastidiously to see which path the 2025 housing market is headed.
Tony:
Rookies, as we all know now’s the time that everybody is waiting for 2025, what’s in retailer for the true property market? Properly, immediately we’ll be sharing an episode from On the Market podcast that can assist you have a transparent thought of what 2025 shall be like. Will mortgage charges lastly fall under 6%? Will residence costs dip with housing stock up a considerable share yr over yr? Properly, let’s discover out On immediately’s episode,
Dave:
It’s formally prediction season, and immediately’s visitor is somebody who by no means takes his eyes off the information. Mike Simonson of Altos Analysis is right here to present us an replace on the housing market as we shut out 2024 and provides us a preview of what he anticipates for the approaching yr. Hey pals, it’s Dave. Welcome to On the Market, the Actual Property Information and Financial Present the place we prefer to have some enjoyable whereas retaining you knowledgeable. And I actually love asking individuals to make predictions as a result of nobody likes doing it, however it’s sort of enjoyable. And regardless that nobody is ever all the time proper with these predictions, I do suppose it’s useful to listen to how persons are pondering by way of these unknowable questions on what’s going to occur within the coming yr. And in immediately’s episode, Mike threw out a prediction on mortgage charges with out me even asking, and he put some nice logic and pondering behind it and I believe it’s going that can assist you all forecast what may occur within the yr to return. So with that, let’s carry on Mike. Mike, welcome again to On the Market. Thanks for becoming a member of us,
Mike:
Dave. It’s all the time nice to be right here.
Dave:
Yeah, it’s a pleasure to have you ever again. All the time one of the crucial knowledgeable analysts and watcher of the housing market that we are able to have. So that is going to be a deal with. We’re Mike, in fact, winding down 2024. So let me simply begin by asking you, did this yr form up the way you have been anticipating it or did something shock you within the housing market in 2024?
Mike:
I believe anyone who was on this spot a yr in the past speaking about 2024, we have been constantly stunned that mortgage charges stayed as excessive as they did for so long as they did.
Mike:
There have been quite a lot of of us at first of 24 that thought mortgage charges can be within the fives in the course of the yr, and we have been within the higher sixes within the sevens as again up within the sevens now. So consequently, residence gross sales didn’t choose up all yr lengthy and we’re actually two and a half years in virtually three years into the dramatic slowdown available in the market. In order that was a shock and there have been impacts different issues that occurred there. So gross sales have been decrease. We knew that stock would develop this yr, however it grew greater than anticipated. The opposite facet of the shock for me for the yr was that we’re in a world the place mortgage charges are increased, the place provide is increased, the place demand is decrease, and but residence costs didn’t decline, so residence costs stayed increased as nicely. And so I’d say that was a shock
Dave:
For positive. Yeah, I used to be a bit stunned by the power of appreciation. I truly, I’m mistaken on a regular basis. I’m not attempting to brag. I truly didn’t suppose mortgage charges have been going to return again down, however I did suppose that that might trigger extra of a moderation in residence value appreciation than we noticed as of final readings. We’re nonetheless up 4% yr over yr. That’s increased than the long-term common. So there have been quite a lot of surprises right here. So perhaps we are able to simply break these down one after the other. Mike, you talked a bit about stock, which has been on all of our minds for the final God 5 years now. However inform us, you mentioned that stock went up quicker than you’re anticipated. Are you able to give us some context? The place does stock sit proper now? How does that examine to historic context? What’s the pattern?
Mike:
Yeah, so there are, as of nicely, we’re recording this 722,000 single household houses in the marketplace unsold across the us. That’s 27% greater than final yr at the moment. Wow. So it’s a reasonably important yr over yr achieve. As of September, late summer season, I assume we have been 40% extra houses than a yr prior. In order that’s a reasonably important achieve. So I used to be anticipating the yr to peak at about 700,000 houses in the marketplace. I believe we peaked round seven 50
Mike:
After we’re single household houses. And that was actually a results of slower demand by way of during the primary, the second quarter into the third quarter as a result of charges have been stubbornly excessive and there was by no means a second of reprieve till center of September. Mortgage charges got here again down shut to six%, just a little head, faux of demand, just a little window. So stock clever, we’re 27% extra houses in the marketplace. One of many issues that’s fascinating about stock proper now’s the stock development is basically concentrated within the south and the Sunbelt states and stock in locations just like the Midwest, like Illinois or Ohio and even within the northeast, New York, just about each place has extra houses in the marketplace now than a yr in the past. However some locations like Illinois, it’s solely just a little bit. And so Illinois or Ohio have simply barely extra houses unsold than in the course of the pandemic
Mike:
The place Austin, Texas is at a 15 yr excessive. And what occurred there? So we have now this bifurcated market. The northern half of the nation has nonetheless has fairly restricted stock. The southern half of the nation has far more obtainable stock, and consequently, costs are gentle. The rationale that that’s occurred is a migration sample. So for years and years we’ve been shifting from the north to the south. You promote your home in Illinois, you purchase it in Texas or Florida. And within the final two and a half years, three years, as rates of interest rose, we stopped shifting. And in order that migration sample is on maintain. And so we’re not promoting our home in Chicago and shopping for it in Dallas. So the stock that we used to purchase in Dallas is build up and the stuff we used to promote in Chicago shouldn’t be obtainable. So that you get this actual bifurcated market across the nation proper now.
Dave:
Attention-grabbing. Okay. Properly let’s dig into a few these issues. First issues first, stock can rise mainly for 2 causes and only for everybody listening, in the event you’re not acquainted, stock is the quantity of houses, properties in the marketplace at any given level. And so you possibly can have stock rise as a result of extra persons are itemizing their properties on the market. That’s known as new listings. So you possibly can see new listings improve or stock also can rise from a decline in demand. Perhaps the identical quantity of latest listings are hitting the market each month, however as a result of they’re not promoting as shortly, they form of compile and stack up, and meaning there’s extra issues in the marketplace on the market. However Mike, it seems like not less than in broad strokes on a nationwide degree, the rationale that stock has risen quicker than you have been anticipating this yr is due to an absence of demand, not as a result of extra persons are promoting their properties.
Mike:
I believe that’s precisely proper and it’s an excellent perception. After we take a look at actually low transaction quantity and we take a look at the market, we are saying, wow, demand’s actually low. We talked about anticipating residence costs to fall as a result of demand is weaker. The remark is that in a world the place within the provide demand equation, demand falls, however provide is fairly, that the brand new vendor provide stays restricted than that creates an surroundings the place it’s tougher for residence costs to fall. The place if we have now each of these sides, we have now extra sellers and fewer consumers,
Mike:
That’s actually after we create that imbalance. And so we look ahead to that each week. And the Altos knowledge, we’re monitoring the brand new listings. And so the brand new listings quantity is about seven 8% greater than final yr at the moment. So it’s rising just a little bit every week. There are just a few extra sellers, however there’s not quite a lot of sellers and there’s nonetheless loads fewer sellers every week of loads fewer new listings every week than say in 2019 or 2018, just like the earlier decade by perhaps tens of hundreds of individuals each week fewer promote their houses now. Nice. Thanks for
Dave:
Clarifying that. Okay, in order that’s the place stock and new listings stand immediately, however what’s going on with these regional variations Mike talked about and the way lengthy does Mike predict charges will keep this excessive? Mikes in after the break. Hey pals, I’m right here with Mike Simonson of Altos Analysis and we’re speaking about what we anticipate from the housing market in 2025. You mentioned one thing else in an earlier reply, Mike, about migration, and I simply needed to get your ideas on this. You mentioned particularly that migration sample is on maintain, and we did see, in fact in the course of the pandemic, lots of people shifting from the west or the Northeast or the Midwest to the southeast or to the Sunbelt mainly noticed the most important in migration. You mentioned it’s on pause. Does that imply you suppose that that is non permanent and that if affordability will get restored someday sooner or later that we’ll see a resumption of that migration sample?
Mike:
I believe it’s non permanent and naturally non permanent. It’s like three years in now, however it’s nonetheless non permanent. And the rationale I say that, it’s a phenomenon that I name the good keep, and we are able to see it in housing, we are able to see it within the migration patterns, we are able to see it within the stock the place we’re not promoting in Chicago and shopping for in Texas or promoting within the Midwest and shopping for in Denver. These have slowed down. And in the event you examine the migration, the parents who examine migration particularly truly level out that locations like Austin had destructive outbound migration within the final yr,
Mike:
And quite a lot of the Western Florida markets had outbound migration truly destructive movement. However that nice keep can be, we see it within the labor market. So in the event you take note of labor market, you’ll know that the unemployment fee could be very low. However in the event you look extra carefully, you’ll see that corporations aren’t hiring very quick and other people aren’t quitting their jobs at charges. So usually when unemployment’s low, individuals give up their jobs loads as a result of they’ll go get a brand new job actually shortly, however they’re not quitting their jobs as a result of corporations aren’t hiring. And so staff, I’ve received an excellent job and I don’t wish to mess that up and I’m not shifting. So we’re not shifting throughout city, we’re not shifting throughout the nation, we’re not quitting our jobs, we’re not hiring as many individuals. I’m sitting nonetheless, and in order that nice keep is underway.
Mike:
So I believe that that slowly transitions out. And I believe because the economic system modifications and perhaps rates of interest come down, whether or not it’s mortgage charges or the opposite rates of interest, that frees up corporations to rent extra. So now in the event that they’re hiring like, oh, they’re hiring in Austin, so I’ll give up my job in Chicago and resume that transfer. So I believe it’s non permanent, however like I mentioned, it’s been three years and within the housing and after we take a look at stock, I believe it’s most likely two extra years of upper mortgage charges earlier than we get to the outdated regular ranges of stock in the marketplace.
Dave:
That is smart. So I’m simply attempting to comply with this. I’m not saying I disagree with the presumption that migration will speed up once more, however the best way I hold about it’s there was all the time migration pre pandemic, and it wasn’t that dramatic. Folks moved on a regular basis and the southeast was rising, however in some methods I really feel like, okay, perhaps even when affordability will get again, migration will resume, however it’ll return to form of pre pandemic ranges. Is that what you’re saying? Or do you suppose this tremendous speedy migration that we noticed in the course of the pandemic, that degree of exercise will resume?
Mike:
Yeah, I believe the pandemic was a novel phenomenon, proper? It was extremely low cost cash and no places of work and it was at a great time to maneuver. So I don’t suppose we get again there with out some sort of loopy disaster. However I do suppose our common patterns, it’s fairly good to maneuver. When you stay in Chicago in February, it’s fairly good to maneuver to Phoenix. There’s quite a lot of enchantment to that. And while you don’t have to fret about stepping into job in Phoenix, then you definately transfer.
Dave:
All proper, nicely, the good keep, I just like the advertising of that. We’re going to must keep watch over that.
Mike:
I might see the impression taking place in housing, which I watch, however then I might additionally discuss, I might watch labor economists speak about this comparable factor taking place within the jobs market, and I believed, wow, that’s the identical phenomenon and that’s why I known as it the good state.
Dave:
Yeah, persons are caught proper now simply usually. They’re simply because yeah, low affordability, man. I hold attempting to get to my subsequent query, Mike, however you retain spilling extra hints that I must comply with up on. So that you talked about that you simply suppose it might take two years of upper rates of interest to get again to regular ranges of stock. Primary, does that imply you suppose charges are going to remain comparatively excessive?
Mike:
I prefer to say that I don’t predict mortgage charges. I’m unsure. I’m not satisfied that anyone can.
Dave:
No, I don’t prefer to.
Mike:
Yeah, I imply I’ve been mistaken on mortgage charges for 30 years, however we are able to take a look at issues and there are issues that dial in to what we find out about mortgage charges for the approaching yr. And actually, at HousingWire, we simply printed at 2025 complete housing market forecast. So we put these assumptions about mortgage charges in there. Mortgage charges transfer in tandem with the ten yr treasury yield. And that within the final couple of months has been climbing the rate of interest on the ten yr treasury has been climbing because the economic system has stayed hotter, the indicators on the employment market, like I mentioned, has stayed decrease than anticipated. Now we have now Trump coming in and the market is viewing the Trump insurance policies as inflationary. So all of this stuff are conspiring to maintain rates of interest increased for now. And so we’re rolling into 2025, round 7% that’s on the excessive finish of the vary that I anticipate for the yr. So we think about a world the place economic system slows just a little bit, we have now just a little bit extra unemployment, so we’ve been on such a tear with the economic system that barely eases down and that permits rates of interest to fall just a little bit in 2025. So within the 6% vary,
Dave:
That appears fairly like what most watchers are predicting.
Mike:
After which the wishful pondering is like does it get down into the fives or the low fives? And the one method we might see that taking place is that if we have now a significant recession hit or some sort of actual disaster hit that abruptly slows the economic system and you may’t predict these. However assuming that doesn’t occur, we have now slowing economic system not accelerating from right here, which might push charges increased. We have now slowing economic system, gently slowing economic system that might ease these again down and hold the charges within the sixes. So we are able to see in our housing wire forecast, I might think about moments in 2025 the place charges dip beneath 6%. We received near that this yr and perhaps you get a handful of these weeks the place it dips beneath 6%, however largely stays 6.75, 6.5, 6.75 if charges keep near seven for the yr or above seven, we’re going to revise issues down. We’re going to imagine fewer purchases. We’re going to say stock builds, like all of our forecasts get revised down if charges surge above 7% for any size of time.
Dave:
Yeah, I imply I believe that is smart and I admire the way you caveat that as a result of when individuals ask what charges are going to be subsequent yr, the yr is a extremely very long time. You see on this previous yr’s knowledge, we’ve had charges near eight, we’ve had charges shut to 6, there’s huge swings there. So I admire you saying that there’s most likely going to be volatility. I hold cautioning folks that even when charges are on a common downward trajectory, which is the consensus view, that it’s going to be a rocky highway down, issues are going to go up, they’re going to go down. I might personally anticipate quite a lot of volatility within the subsequent yr. However Mike, given what you simply mentioned that you simply suppose charges will keep within the sixes for essentially the most half subsequent yr, you probably did say that you simply suppose stock would develop again over the course of two years. Is that since you suppose with charges that top demand goes to remain out of the market?
Mike:
Yeah, I believe the rule of thumb is increased charges results in increased stock, decrease charges results in decrease stock, and you may see that in the course of the pandemic charges dropped dramatically and stock dropped dramatically. Then within the three years now put up pandemic charges climbed and stock climbed, you possibly can see that relationship fairly clearly. And so in a world the place charges say within the sixes now that’s increased than most People have householders have already got on their present mortgages, so name that top mortgage charges. And so that suggests that stock will hold constructing. And so I anticipate we known as it 17% stock development for subsequent yr. So we grew 27% this yr and rising perhaps 17% extra subsequent yr. And I don’t see an even bigger surge than that except, like I mentioned, you get these situations the place we’ve been anticipating for 2 years that charges would ease down after which they go the opposite method. So these situations might occur, though I don’t anticipate them to occur.
Dave:
Thanks for clarifying that and also you’re beating me to a few of my questions on 2025, however we’ll get again to that in only a minute. However earlier than we do, I needed to ask you about just a few hyper current knowledge because you take a look at stock transaction quantity on per week to week foundation. We’re recording this, what’s it, the nineteenth of November immediately. So we’re two weeks after the presidential election, and loads was made main as much as the election that individuals have been sitting on the sidelines. I learn a survey on Redfin that mentioned 25% of potential residence consumers have been ready till after the election. I believe there was some knowledge that supported that. Mike first, did you see that decelerate? After which for the reason that election, have you ever observed any modifications in stock or transaction quantity?
Mike:
We observed election week a dramatic dip. Folks didn’t do something that week, they usually rebounded just a little bit within the final week. So barely extra sellers, a tiny uptick in stock. It was about 7% extra transactions occurred within the first week after the election. And so just a little little bit of uptick, and I anticipated that as nicely, and it was not in reality as huge an uptick as I anticipated.
Mike:
And when you concentrate on these of us in that survey who mentioned, I’m ready till after the election, quite a lot of of us have been pondering, I used to be speaking to a buddy this weekend who mentioned, my mortgage man instructed me to attend to refinance until after the election. And so he didn’t seize his 6%. He purchased his home a yr in the past and he didn’t seize it when charges dipped down to six%. He didn’t do his refi. He was ready until after the election. What he didn’t understand was that instantly after the election, now charges are even increased. So he’s nonetheless ready. And so he waited until after the election and now he’s received to attend until subsequent spring and perhaps there’s one other turnaround, a dip in charges earlier than he can refinance once more. So I anticipate that there’s that sort of factor taking place
Dave:
The place individuals simply thought mainly after the election, a technique or one other charges have been going to go down,
Mike:
Perhaps they go down and like I mentioned, it’s actually laborious to forecast mortgage charges, so who is aware of what is definitely going to occur. However I might think about that folk have been pondering that, and what we turned out is we haven’t but had higher as a result of cash received costlier.
Dave:
Yeah, I agree. I believe regardless that individuals could be extra enthusiastic or extra be capable of even simply commit extra thoughts share to the concept of shopping for a house or shopping for an funding property after the election, the truth is that charges have simply actually gone up loads within the final two months. In September, they’ve gone up just about 100 foundation factors. And so even in the event you have been ready, I don’t suppose there’s loads in simply precise {dollars} and cents that might say, Hey, now the election’s over, you need to go purchase a home as a result of it’s nonetheless far more costly than it was two months in the past.
Mike:
Yeah, I believe that’s precisely proper. And so we truly noticed an acceleration of demand and truly costs in that little September window when charges received nearer to 6,
Mike:
We didn’t see it when charges have been at six and a half. They’d come from seven and a half down to 6 and a half, and we didn’t actually see any acceleration but. We did see it at nearer to 6, after which now we’re again up in direction of seven. So after we take a look at the spring, for instance, if charges occur to ease again down nearer to 6 by the spring, that might be very bullish for residence gross sales within the spring range. It’d be bullish for, we’ll see extra transactions you’d see, and in the event that they dip far sufficient quick sufficient, you would truly see stock fall and never develop yr over yr. If we get fortunate on the price of cash, it’d be fortunate for individuals who are financing. It’d be unfortunate for individuals who are competing for fewer houses once more,
Dave:
For positive. Yeah, that’s a great way to place it. All proper, time for one closing break, however after we come again, what are the massive questions on Mike’s thoughts as he appears to be like to 2025? Persist with us. Welcome again to On the Market. Let’s bounce again in. Let’s flip our consideration to 2025. You’ve instructed us just a little bit about what you suppose, however perhaps simply inform us the massive themes. What are you most keen to observe as we enter a brand new yr?
Mike:
So the massive theme for 2025 is the query, are we lastly going to develop residence gross sales? Are this variety of transactions lastly going to develop now for the buyer? Customers care about residence costs? Are my costs going to go up? Are costs going to go down? However for the economic system and for the business, the variety of transactions actually issues.
Dave:
Completely.
Mike:
And it’s the variety of transactions that received pummeled this cycle put up pandemic. And so a traditional yr of residence gross sales could be 5 million residence gross sales. We received up over 6 million in the course of the pandemic and now we’re down at 4 million. So a 3rd fewer residence gross sales within the final couple of years. That’s dramatically fewer.
Dave:
Yeah. Yeah. I hold telling folks that. I believe lots of people who aren’t within the business, such as you mentioned, simply take a look at costs, however quite a lot of our viewers right here on this podcast are actual property brokers who’re mortgage officers, who’re individuals who rely upon transaction quantity for his or her livelihood. And I believe for these individuals, and only for traders and individuals who watch this market, the shift has been actually dramatic as a result of a traditional yr, even earlier than the pandemic was over 5 million. And so even when we have been evaluating this yr to pre pandemic, it might be a reasonably dramatic decline. However abruptly while you simply look again at current historical past, we’re form of using at close to all time highs over 6 million. And now to see that fall so dramatically, it simply seems like excessive whiplash. And I’d additionally think about lots of people jumped into the business in 2021 and 2022 as a result of it was so helpful, and now there’s simply method fewer offers and transactions for maybe an even bigger quantity of individuals counting on these transactions for his or her livelihood.
Mike:
That’s precisely proper. So after we take a look at 2025, the query is, are we lastly going to develop residence gross sales? And in that case, by how a lot? The query on costs is much less compelling proper now, as a result of as we are able to see, regardless that the transaction quantity fell by a 3rd within the final couple of years and stayed low for 2 and a half years, regardless that that occurred, residence costs stored ticking up in most components of the nation. However let’s begin with the transaction quantity. So it’s actually been two and a half years of low transactions proper now at two full years, 23 and 24 at about 4 million a tempo of 4 million residence gross sales. Then the query is, will it lastly develop subsequent yr? And in that case, by how a lot? The best way we take a look at it’s we anticipate residence gross sales to develop by about 5% in 2025, so that might be about 4.2 million residence gross sales.
Mike:
So just a little little bit of development, not a ton of development, but in addition not staying like we’re going to get some development. Lastly, and the rationale it appears to be like like about 5% development is that we are able to cease shopping for homes in a short time, like we go to 6 to 4 million gross sales in a short time, however it takes extra years to ramp up that demand once more. So there are only a few years the place residence gross sales develop by 10% or extra. So in the event you see of us like I believe NAR perhaps had a mentioned 4.9 million residence gross sales for subsequent yr, and I simply can’t determine how the market might develop by 25% or 20% in a single yr with out some sort of loopy authorities program. However we are able to see 5% development, and that suggests some stability in mortgage charges. So we’re assuming that mortgage charges keep within the sixes, so we’re wanting slight development, 5% development, 200,000 extra gross sales within the yr, and then you definately do this once more the subsequent yr, and that’s the way you develop the business again to its regular tempo is over a a number of years. In order that we’re simply speaking transaction quantity, so go from 4 million to 4.2 million.
Dave:
Okay. However you simply alluded to, you’ll say costs. So what do you suppose will occur for costs
Mike:
When you suppose long-term? Regular value appreciation is about 5% a yr. Dwelling costs are likely to develop about 5% a yr over the numerous many years as a result of the economic system grows, inhabitants grows. We beneath construct residence costs are likely to develop about 5% per yr. And actually this yr 2024, they’re coming in proper about 4 or 5%. We expect for 25 we’ll underperform the long-term common. So we do about three and a half % residence value development in 2025.
Dave:
Okay.
Mike:
And now we don’t see situations outright residence value declines nationally, except we get into some wacky actual excessive issues with mortgage charges, transaction volumes fall again method down. That would drive provide up demand down, and that might drive residence costs down, however we expect the possible situation is about three and a half % residence value development for the yr subsequent yr.
Dave:
Acquired it. All proper. Properly, thanks, Mike. That’s tremendous, tremendous useful. Earlier than we get out of right here, is there anything from all of the analysis you do that you simply suppose our viewers ought to know heading into subsequent yr?
Mike:
I believe the true fascinating one to observe is that new listings quantity every week, as a result of a few issues must occur. We wish to see if we’re going to see 5% extra gross sales subsequent yr, we have to see extra listings subsequent yr. We have to see extra sellers, and so we have to watch that quantity go up. However, if that quantity spikes, let’s say individuals get freaked out about dropping their job they usually begin promoting their houses. Buyers wish to get out earlier than some crash occurs, regardless of the phenomenon is, distressed sellers, and instantly we go from say, 60 or 70,000 new listings for single household houses. Every week we go to 70, 80, 90,000. If it goes again above the outdated regular ranges, then we speak about that provide is up, demand is down. These are the situations the place costs might go down, like even crash subsequent yr. So the cool one to observe is that new listings quantity every week as a result of it actually helps us verify any speculation we would have about the marketplace for subsequent yr.
Dave:
Nice. Properly, Mike, thanks as all the time. That is all the time a enlightening, enjoyable dialog. We admire your time,
Mike:
Dave. It’s my pleasure.
Dave:
If you wish to file Mike and his analysis, we’ll hyperlink to his work in Altos and Housing wire under, so make sure that to verify that out. And thanks all a lot for listening to this episode of On The Market. We’ll see you subsequent time.
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