January 2008 Case Shiller Seattle
January 2007: 183.92
December 2007: 184.88
January 2008: 181.62
-1.3% year over year
-1.8% month to month
December 2007: 184.88
January 2008: 181.62
-1.3% year over year
-1.8% month to month
Comments
Now down 5.55% from July 07 peak.. Portland now negative YOY as well. Charlotte still hanging on to it's meager bubble gains.
Phoenix, San Diego, Vegas and Detroit all went over 20% off peak. Miami is right behind at -19.75%.
Interestingly, Seattle's C-S index is now higher than the 20 city composite index for the first time since March 2000, 181.62 vs. 180.65, but still 15 points lower than the 10 city index.
Charlotte -3.08%
Portland -4.13%
Seattle -5.55%
Dallas -6.25%
Atlanta -6.88%
New York City -7.11%
Chicago -7.19%
Denver -8.05%
Boston -10.89%
Minneapolis -11.59%
Cleveland -12.15%
Composite 20 -12.53%
Composite 10 -13.36%
Washington DC -15.23%
San Francisco -15.83%
Los Angeles -18.08%
Tampa -18.25%
Miami -19.75%
Las Vegas -20.76%
Phoenix -20.82%
San Diego -21.13%
Detroit -21.16%
Look, median home price is up 0.03% since 7 A.M. yesterday!!
Lies, damn lies, and statistics.
How prescient of you. This article from CNN highlights for me the direction we're heading. The article regards the NARs calculation that housing prices are down 8.2% YOY. But let's look at some of the quotes from the article.
It's never mentioned that sales always rise MOM heading into spring. January is among the slowest months of the year, so any expert would not think a 3% increase in sales is a big thing. But let's see what the experts are quoted as thinking.
Forget that YOY, sales are down 23.8% (same article), it's clear from the MOM data that things are getting better. But just to end on a realistic note...
Even the trumped up optimist said "We still have a ways to go" and yet prices have regressed to 4 years ago. 15% is the type of decline people generally don't believe can happen in any metropolis, let alone nationwide. I think we'll see prices below 2002 levels before all is said and done, which adjusted for inflation is around 1998 levels of affordability.
Also, this February had an extra day. I wonder how that factored in.
Using NAR math, we see that Feb sales/day over Jan sales/day is actually 1.096, or a 9.6% increase in average sales per day. Such an increase is clearly something, something. Ergo, the slump is over.