Case-Shiller Home Prices Slide Another 0.5 Percent, Actual Drop is Much Worse

Case-Shiller home price data via St. Louis Fed, chart by Mish

Home Price Synopsis

  • Home prices have peaked this cycle but the decline is certainly tiny compared to the run up.
  • There is a two-month lag in reporting. The latest report is for December and that represents sales primarily made in October and November.
  • The declines shown are undoubtedly understated by a lot.
  • Declines will accelerate but not fast enough to revive a housing market that has soured dramatically.

CS National ,Top 10 Metro, CPI, OER Index Levels

Case-Shiller home price data via St. Louis Fed, CPI, OER, and Rent from the BLS, chart by Mish

Chart Notes

  • OER stands for Owner’s Equivalent Rent. It it the price one would pay to rent a home, unfurnished and without utilities.
  • Home prices wildly disconnected from the CPI in 2000 and in 2013. The disconnect accelerated in 2020.

The Fed ignored all three occasions hoping to make up for “lack of inflation”. The Fed “succeeded” in producing inflation beyond it’s wildest dreams. 

Rent, OER, Case-Shiller Percent Change From Year Ago

Case-Shiller home price data via St. Louis Fed, CPI, OER, and Rent from the BLS, chart by Mish

The year-over-year CPI has finally peaked this cycle as have home prices. But both are falling slowly. Inflation has been sticky.

Case-Shiller Home Prices Percent Change Year-Over-Year

Case-Shiller home price data via St. Louis Fed, chart by Mish

I am certain that home prices are not up a national average of 5.76 percent from a year ago. 

The chart is the very lagging. Prices in many places are down much more. Yet, the chart is more accurate than many portray. 

For example, in its latest report the National Association of Realtors reported “the median existing-home sales price increased 1.3% from one year ago to $359,000”. 

Median prices are not an accurate measure but they are more timely. Both measures are flawed, but in different ways.

Prices have been sticky because existing home owners have low mortgage rates and do not want to move. Supply is limited. 

Don’t dwell too much on the percentages because the data is stale.

But do look at the trends. Those trends will be in place for a while. 

Also compare high tax Chicago and New York with low tax Miami.  Prices reflect an escape from tax hell. Cities in California are joining that club.

Existing Home Sales Decline 12th Month 

No Rebound in Existing Home Sales Despite a Drop in Mortgage Rates

A brief drop in mortgage rates towards 6.0 percent was not enough to entice buyers in January. Buyers and sellers are on strike. 

For discussion, please see No Rebound in Existing Home Sales Despite a Drop in Mortgage Rates

Buyers want lower prices, but sellers want the prices they could have gotten 18 months ago. 

And the existing home owners do not want to trade a 3.0 percent mortgage rate for a 6.8 percent mortgage. 

People are trapped in their homes, but in a much different way than 2008.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

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Directed Energy
Directed Energy
1 year ago
Huntsville metro area is up 2% after a massive surge the last few years. The city won #1 place to live in 2022. The city of Madison is the most desirable area, and $400k seems to be the magic number. The schools are excellent and commutes are about 15 minutes to the Arsenal or the Research Park. Huntsville is truly amazing and the economy is on fire!
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Number 1 place to live by the Huntsville chamber of commerce and real estate lobby ? those rankings always crack me up. one man’s heaven is another man’s hell. i personally am content in the middle of the biggest cities on earth, and also in the middle of redwood forest and wine country and in the desert and on a remote beach or small town. i’ve lived in all those places and find they all don’t change my outlook on my daily life. enjoying one’s life is up to oneself.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
looks to me like it’s a faster and sharper decline than the panic of 2007……….in r/e pricing. more a rolling top to falling over 16 years ago. i thought my old hood in downtown phoenix topped out in 2004 went flat for a year and started going down in 2006 and picked up steam after Bear Stearns mortgage funds started burning down……summer of 2007. this seems quicker. stuff was on fire last summer. now she’s dead as a door nail. in my new but old home of the little village of brooklyn ny
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
great analysis. love it. one quibble. ask yourself why manhattan which peaked in population in 1880s, has had a major increase in real estate prices on their residential units. better performing than miami or l.a. or phoenix in price appreciation in the past 50 years. like stock prices are NOT correlated to earnings in spite of most belief, r/e pricing is NOT correlated to population growth.
Jack
Jack
1 year ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
50 yrs ago NY was burnt out ghetto with riots in the street and open crime.
Gentrification happened.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
1 year ago
re: “Supply is limited.” Bernanke is responsible for the housing shortage. He bankrupt half the home builders. Then Powell suppressed interest rates to historically low levels stoking housing prices (reweighting risk assets).

It’s Gresham’s law: “a
statement of the least cost “principle of substitution” as applied to money:
that a commodity (or service) will be devoted to those uses which are the most
profitable.

vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Reply to  Salmo Trutta
NYC limited supply as did NJ and boston etc……………………long long long before bernanke was a twinkle in his parents eyes. NIMBY BABY. now for honors question. you seem sharp. what 2 rich world countries kept up the housing supply in the last generation of 20 years to go with growth of population. hint. europe. per economist newspaper.
FromBrussels2
FromBrussels2
1 year ago
Slightly off topic; let me inform you nevertheless about the business bankruptcy wave (20% increase ) going on in Germany at present undeniably due to US’ war against Russia ….Thank you again US of A, who needs enemies with a friend like you ?! …..Germans , the smart part of them anyway , must be thinking…. Hey send more arms to Ukraine , and evwythin gonna be jus fine …..for your war industry in the first place …
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
What’s good for Raytheon is good for America. /s
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
From Brussels2, you should read
Daneric’s Elliott Waves – Elliott Wave Theory, Technical Analysis, and Social Mood Commentary (danericselliottwaves.org)
LM2022
LM2022
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
Nice try, Comrade. I know plenty of Europeans. All of them blame Putin and Russia for their economic issues.
FromBrussels2
FromBrussels2
1 year ago
Reply to  LM2022
yeah Zardoz ….you are right…. especially about the potatoe bit, that is
Zardoz
Zardoz
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2

Shhhh comrade! If US was at war with Russia, Russia be smoking hole in the ground. No more potato! End of flush toilet dreaming!

Siliconguy
Siliconguy
1 year ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Unfortunately the US would also be a smoking hole, or probably two smoking ditches, one on each coast.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
“Home prices have peaked this cycle but the decline is certainly tiny compared to the run up.”
Last week I read that a “trapped” (low mortgage rate) homeowner got a nasty surprise … the escrow portion of mortgage jumped bigly due to new property tax (and insurance) assessment.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
That happens here in Florida all the time especially insurance due to mandatory hurricane insurance.
It’s not uncommon to have escrow rise by several hundred a month!

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