" />
Search
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in comments
Search in excerpt
Filter by Custom Post Type
Content from
{ "homeurl": "https://ace.rismedia.com/", "resultstype": "vertical", "resultsposition": "hover", "itemscount": 4, "imagewidth": 70, "imageheight": 70, "resultitemheight": "auto", "showauthor": 0, "showdate": 1, "showdescription": 1, "charcount": 3, "noresultstext": "No results!", "didyoumeantext": "Did you mean:", "defaultImage": "https://ace.rismedia.com/wp-content/plugins/ajax-search-pro/img/default.jpg", "highlight": 0, "highlightwholewords": 1, "openToBlank": 1, "scrollToResults": 0, "resultareaclickable": 1, "autocomplete": { "enabled": 1, "googleOnly": 1, "lang": "en", "mobile": 1 }, "triggerontype": 1, "triggeronclick": 1, "triggeronreturn": 1, "triggerOnFacetChange": 1, "trigger": { "delay": 300, "autocomplete_delay": 310 }, "overridewpdefault": 0, "override_method": "post", "redirectonclick": 0, "redirectClickTo": "results_page", "redirect_on_enter": 0, "redirectEnterTo": "results_page", "redirect_url": "?s={phrase}", "settingsimagepos": "left", "settingsVisible": 0, "hresulthidedesc": "0", "prescontainerheight": "400px", "pshowsubtitle": "0", "pshowdesc": "1", "closeOnDocClick": 1, "iifNoImage": "description", "iiRows": 2, "iiGutter": 5, "iitemsWidth": 200, "iitemsHeight": 200, "iishowOverlay": 1, "iiblurOverlay": 1, "iihideContent": 1, "loaderLocation": "auto", "analytics": 0, "analyticsString": "", "show_more": { "url": "?s={phrase}", "action": "ajax" }, "mobile": { "trigger_on_type": 1, "trigger_on_click": 1, "hide_keyboard": 0 }, "compact": { "enabled": 1, "width": "300px", "closeOnMagnifier": 1, "closeOnDocument": 0, "position": "fixed", "overlay": 0 }, "animations": { "pc": { "settings": { "anim" : "fadedrop", "dur" : 300 }, "results" : { "anim" : "fadedrop", "dur" : 300 }, "items" : "fadeInDown" }, "mob": { "settings": { "anim" : "fadedrop", "dur" : 300 }, "results" : { "anim" : "fadedrop", "dur" : 300 }, "items" : "voidanim" } }, "autop": { "state": "disabled", "phrase": "", "count": 100 } }
Share This Post Now!

The housing market continued to cool in March, with home prices posting yet another weak annual increase, according to the latest S&P Cotality Case-Shiller National Home Price NSA Index released Tuesday.

The March S&P Cotality Case-Shiller Home Price Index saw a 0.7% year-over-year gain in home prices, down from a 0.8% rise in February. Month-over-month, the index fell 0.2%, down from last month’s rise of 0.1%.

Nicholas Godec, head of Fixed Income Tradables & Commodities at S&P Dow Jones Indices, noted that “more than half of major U.S. metropolitan markets posted year-over-year price declines in February, signaling that the housing slowdown has broadened well beyond its Sun Belt origins.”

“The S&P Cotality Case-Shiller National Home Price Index rose just 0.7% year-over-year in February, down from 0.8% in January,” he continued. “With consumer inflation at 2.4%, U.S. home values have lost ground in real terms for nine consecutive months.”

As for individual cities, the seasonally adjusted 10-City Composite saw a 1.4% year-over-year gain (down from 1.5% in February and 1.7% in January), and a 0.2% month-over-month decrease (down from a 0.1% increase the prior month).

The seasonally adjusted 20-City Composite grew 0.8% year-over-year (down from 0.9% in February), and saw a 0.03% decrease month-over-month (up from a 0.05% decrease). 

Breaking it down geographically, Chicago led the pack in the 20-City Composite with a 6.1% year-over-year price gain, followed by New York and Cleveland with annual gains of 4.0% and 3.0%, respectively.

On the opposite end, Seattle’s 2.5% year-over-year decline was the steepest in March, with Denver (-2.0%), Tampa (-1.9%), Dallas (-1.7%) and Phoenix (-1.6%) joining Seattle among the weakest performers.

Realtor.com® Senior Economist Anthony Smith noted that the “8.6-percentage-point gap separating Chicago from Seattle underscores how localized this housing cycle has become.”

“Looking ahead, mortgage rates have risen to 6.51% as of late May, pushed higher by renewed inflation concerns and elevated energy prices. The rate environment has shifted meaningfully from the brief sub-6% window earlier this year, introducing fresh headwinds as the spring market ramps up,” he continued. “At the same time, inventory is running above year-ago levels in many markets, and affordability has continued to subtly improve as incomes outpace home price gains. In supply-constrained markets, price growth is likely to hold even as the national picture continues to cool.”

10.20.2.102