These 49 housing markets to see home prices fall over 15%—this interactive map shows Moody’s updated forecast for 322 markets

The reason U.S. home prices are falling is pretty simple: Pressurized affordability.

A historic mortgage rate shock—with the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate jumping from 3% to 6% this year—following the Pandemic Housing Boom's 41.3% run-up in U.S. home prices in just over two years has simply pushed many would-be buyers to their breaking point. Other borrowers, who must meet lenders' strict debt-to-income ratios, have lost mortgage eligibility altogether. That historic squeeze, which comes from prices and rates, is what Fortune calls "pressurized affordability."

Already, pressurized affordability has seen U.S. home prices, as measured by the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index, fall for the first time on a seasonal adjusted basis since 2012. In total, U.S. home prices fell 2.2% between June 2022 and September 2022. That ties the second biggest home price correction of the post-World War II era.

Whenever a publication like Fortune says "U.S. homes prices," we're talking about a national aggregate. Whatever comes next in the U.S. housing market will surely vary by market, price point, and home-type.

To get an idea of what might come next, Fortune once again reached out to Moody's Analytics to get their updated home price forecast (see map below) for 322 of the nation's largest housing markets. (Here's their previous metro-by-metro forecast).

Here's what the data says.

View this interactive chart on Fortune.com

Back in May, Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi told Fortune that the Federal Reserve's inflation fight would see the U.S. housing market slip into a "housing correction." At the time, he expected home prices to flatline nationally and fall between 5% to 10% in "significantly overvalued" markets.

Zandi, of course, was right about the housing correction. That correction has actually been so sharp that Moody's Analytics in October once again lowered its national home price outlook. Peak-to-trough, Zandi expects U.S. home prices to fall 10%. If a recession does manifest, that outlook shifts down to a 20% peak-to-trough decline.

"No change in our outlook for [national] house prices or the mortgage rate. I am feeling more confident that the economy will be able to avoid a full-blown recession next year, which is consistent with the 10% peak-to-trough decline in national house prices," Zandi told Fortune on Friday. Through spring 2023, he expects mortgage rates to hover around 6.5%.