Eye On Housing—The S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes were released recently with data through January for the 10 and 20 city composites (and component cities). The national index, which is calculated quarterly, and the Charlotte, NC metropolitan area, due to delays in data reporting, were not included in the release.
The composites were both down 0.8 percent from December, according to the non-seasonally adjusted data. Some of the decline is clearly seasonal, after strong mid-year gains, but the overall trend for these two indexes in 2009-2011 has been modestly negative.
More broadly, house prices in Denver, Boston, Detroit, Cleveland and Dallas continued to oscillate in the narrow ranges they’ve occupied since 2009, while prices in Las Vegas and Tampa trended down unabated, although at slower paces since 2009. The most troubling patterns in today’s release are the declining prices in the California markets that threaten to reverse what appeared to be promising recoveries, and the possible re-acceleration of price declines in the Atlanta market.
For the full histories of the 20 markets included in the Case-Shiller composite, click here.
View this original post at the NAHB blog, Eye on Housing.