"Certainly we’re looking at a slower period, but we still have a lot of need out there, and housing affordability is the worst it’s been in most people’s lifetime," Dworkin noted. 

Earlier this month it was revealed that the national median single-family existing-home price rose 14.2% annually to $413,500, surpassing $400,000 for the first time, according to the National Association of Realtors. 

 "In markets where you’re going to continue to have a steady demand — Florida may be one of those — then you’re to going to see a much smoother recessionary impact, which I think is what we really are dealing with here," Dworkin told host Neil Cavuto on Monday. 

"And you’re also going to see in many markets that have not seen a huge increase, but have kind of been pretty normal, you’re going to have them remain largely so."

"In the most inflated markets you’re going to see prices come down, but I think because the demand is so high and supply is so short, we still are going to have a muted response," he continued. 

"Now, that’s a real problem for Chairman Powell, because one of the ways he controls inflation is by raising rates and if the supply remains out of match with demand, then the big tool in his toolbox is definitely blunted."