Don’t Miss a Post. Subscribe now.

Yet Another Record High for Case-Shiller Home Prices

The recently released Case-Shiller national and 10-city home price indexes hit new highs for July.

Case-Shiller home price indexes and BLS CPI measures through July, chart by Mish

Chart Notes

  • National and 10-city indexes from Case-Shiller
  • The CPI, OER, and Rent measures are from the BLS
  • OER is Owners’ Equivalent Rent, the price a homeowner would pay to rent their home, unfurnished, without utilities.

Case-Shiller data was released on Tuesday. But the St. Louis Fed did not have the data posed until Wednesday or Thursday.

I am not sure why the delays on this series but it is frequently late.

Case-Shiller Home Price Index National and Top 10

New Record Highs

  • National
  • 10-City Composite
  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • Las Vegas
  • Miami
  • New York
  • San Diego
  • D.C

Missing from the above list are San Francisco and Denver.

Data is through July and that represents sales from May, June, and July so it’s possible the top set in more cities than shown above.

Housing Related Posts

The Fed Predicts an Immaculate Soft Landing

Meanwhile, please note my Hoot of the Day: The Fed Predicts an Immaculate Soft Landing

I review all of the jobs and unemployment data. The Fed predicts a soft landing. I don’t.

Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com

Thanks for Tuning In!

Mish

Comments to this post are now closed.

41 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
deadbeatloser
deadbeatloser
1 year ago

tea leaves here on westcoast tell me RE peaked just now…..

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 year ago

Chicago? New York? D.C.?

But I thought everyone was leaving the big blue cities?

Avery2
Avery2
1 year ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

I agree with your comment. Many $300,000 / year pension suburban public school district assistant superintendents are staying put in Chicago METRO area.

Last edited 1 year ago by Avery2
Laura
Laura
1 year ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

They are. Landlords are buying the properties to rent. Chicago has over 45,000 illegals. We sold at record highs and moved out of state. We never listed our property for sale. We told a landlord we were going to sell and he made us a record high offer.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 year ago
Reply to  Laura

But Chicago has 2,746,388 people. Where are there that many houses lying around empty for people to move to? Ditto for NY and DC.

Oh wait it’s 2,746,388 + 45,000 – 2?

Spencer
Spencer
1 year ago

Bernanke contracted money flows, yes, he “did it again”. Powell has yet to contract money flows (i.e., force negative rates-of-change).

Artificially low real-rates of interest have forced investors to rebalance into higher-yielding assets, to stoke housing and stock prices.

Suppressed interest rates siphon funds dissipated in financial investment (the transfer of title to goods, properties, or claims thereto), as opposed to real investment, i.e., it represents a surfeit of savings over real-investment outlets. It’s become a rentier economy, i.e., Marxism.

Last edited 1 year ago by Spencer
joedidee
joedidee
1 year ago

has anyone calculated % devaluation of fiat $dollar thanks to biden/harris
and how about 2024 devaluation??
and coming 2025 estimates(companies ready to raise prices 10-20% again)

David Heartland
David Heartland
1 year ago
Reply to  joedidee

I have JUST AT THIS moment Calculated, using a Spreasheet, the COMPOUNDED RATE OF INFLATION since the end of WWII (1944) to a projected end of this year: 488% inflation, using the FED’s OWN 2% objective. $100 in 1944 is now $488.

HubrisEveryWhereOnline
HubrisEveryWhereOnline
1 year ago

Yeah, I really hated it when I found a $100 bill from 1944 in my grandfather’s bedside table after he passed. I thought, wow, he could have had so much more fun with that back then than me now.

But then I thought, but I don’t think he missed it much because all of his Social Security payments were indexed each year to inflation (using CPI) so he was no worse off all those decades he received Social Security.

And then I thought, what am I worried about? If he earned the average weekly wage in 1944, and I earn the average weekly wage now, I earn significantly more than the so-called compounded rate of inflation ‘issue’. My grandfather would be a proud American my standard of living is so much better than his.

bmcc
bmcc
1 year ago

a good comparison is go to an old city in usa like boston/ny/sf etc…….and compare the cost of a one or two bedroom apartment in 1945 and 1900 in minimum wage work in hours and calories expended to make that dough. today’s costs are much less. due to much easier life to make the rent………

DaveFromDenver
DaveFromDenver
1 year ago

Don’t focus on wages. Include all those things that the government now provides you at no cost to you, like our $35 Trillion National Debt.

deadbeatloser
deadbeatloser
1 year ago
Reply to  joedidee

just look at GOLD over last 4 yrs. Your welcome

joedidee
joedidee
1 year ago

I’m in 55+ mini-resort with park model/RV’s
you buy lot – 40×60 – right now they are $70k to $90k(with concrete done)
older 80’s park model run $130-$150
newer 2000+ are $170-$200+
—-
guy yesterday said since they all pay CASH little reason to discount

David Heartland
David Heartland
1 year ago
Reply to  joedidee

We use a Summer Co-Op park membership here in Oregon. $600 a month fixed Lot Rent INCLUDING POWER/WATER/SEWER/CABLE MODEM; we can stay here until we die (we live in Europe part time) and we are in a nearly water-front Property. We are on the RV side.

We also have two park sections: Mobile Homes and our Rolling RV’s. The Mobiles are now selling for $325,000 for a good newer one. Rent is $450 plus utilities.

Across the Bay from us: A CITY OWNED PARK is now $1800 a month, in a PAVED parking lot on a marina. Nice, but exposed to Bay winds and driving rains.

Bam_Man
Bam_Man
1 year ago

Creeping hyperinflation.

Bam_Man
Bam_Man
1 year ago
Reply to  Bam_Man

From the Sept. 4th issue of Wine Spectator. These are regular size 750 ml bottles.

Louis Latour – Romanee St.-Vivant 2022 $1,250
Albert Bichot – Clos de Vougeot 2022 $673
Albert Bichot – Latricieres-Chambertin 2022 $770
Faively – Echezeaux en Ourveaux 2022 $495
Louis Latour – Echezeaux 2022 $550
Krug – Brut Champagne 2011 $470

rjd1955
rjd1955
1 year ago
Reply to  Bam_Man

How’s MD-20/20 Red Grape Wine doing these days?

bmcc
bmcc
1 year ago
Reply to  Bam_Man

those are downers like opiates……….lived in wine country and saw the depression of the visitors and owners……….

JayW
JayW
1 year ago

Thank you Fed for creating this wonder bubble where the portion of society who can afford a home continues to shrink month by month. Thank you, Congress, for your massive overreaction to COVID which helped fuel this mega bubble.

There’s simply no telling when a housing recession will arrive, but it’s a near certainty that the Fed & Congress will overreact to keep housing from fall off a cliff.

Bernanke_Airdrop
Bernanke_Airdrop
1 year ago
Reply to  JayW

Housing permabears are so wrong, Wolf being one of the biggest. There’s massive demand for SFHs and not enough being constructed.

DaveFromDenver
DaveFromDenver
1 year ago
Reply to  JayW

Replace “overreact” with “take control”. Which is what Harris wanted all along.

Alex
Alex
1 year ago

The big question one faces is, will there be deflation or inflation? We’re in the early stages of deflation. But the Fed and government are ready at the trigger to inflate as things worsen. The end game will always be inflation since the government wants to maintain control and that involves printing money. Got gold?

Last edited 1 year ago by Alex
Alex
Alex
1 year ago
Reply to  Alex

By the way, great article by Norwegian professor Glenn Diesen on the Nordstream destruction. And for those with learning disabilities, yes, it was the US.

https://www.rt.com/news/604776-two-years-nord-stream-attack/

William
William
1 year ago
Reply to  Alex

But anyone with a working brain already knew that

Scott Craig LeBoo
Scott Craig LeBoo
1 year ago

Hundreds of billions at 0% from 2008 to 2022 provided by the banks to the wealthy and already wealthy via hedge funds and private equity has meant everything in America is for sale (Sears, Toys R Us etc) and being bought — America will be owned by the top 5000 families who will own 99% of everything very soon — all time highs for stocks, bonds, real estate, company purchases, apartment buildings. This is why everything is expensive in the US and around the world, and no one is talking about this post-2008 “emergency funding,” which will continue to run when interest rates go back down to zero in 2025. We will all be renters and working for minimum wage.

Flavia
Flavia
1 year ago

I agree – the feudalization of the middle class.

bmcc
bmcc
1 year ago
Reply to  Flavia

feudalism has always been the highest and best form of capital creation for the owners. it was always inevitable. never in question imho. figured this out in econ 101 at age eighteen

KGB
KGB
1 year ago

The prices are the same. The dollars are worth less.

Bayleaf
Bayleaf
1 year ago
Reply to  KGB

Correct, but you’re not saying much. It’s always relative.

Bam_Man
Bam_Man
1 year ago
Reply to  KGB

Partially correct.
“The weight of the 1 oz. gold coin is the same. The dollars are worth less.”

Bayleaf
Bayleaf
1 year ago
Reply to  Bam_Man

The S&P 500 index performed as well if not better than gold over the past five years with less volatility. Like I said, it’s all relative.

Last edited 1 year ago by Bayleaf
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
1 year ago
Reply to  Bayleaf

I suppose the 29% decline in the S&P during the first nine months of 2022 doesn’t count.

Gold’s biggest decline during the same period was far less than that.

Blurtman
Blurtman
1 year ago

Upward stonk market multiplier effect.

robbyrob Im back!
robbyrob Im back!
1 year ago

As Florida Storms Worsen, Some in Tampa Bay Wonder: Is Living There Worth It?https://archive.ph/vAJgV

Bayleaf
Bayleaf
1 year ago

Perhaps the cooling phase we’re in is starting to adversely affect the weather? We need more global warming to counteract it.

PapaDave
PapaDave
1 year ago
Reply to  Bayleaf

Lol! Cooling phase? Got some data to show that?

August was the 15th consecutive world record monthly warm temperature.

https://wmo.int/media/news/record-breaking-temperatures-continue-august

Zero Gravity
Zero Gravity
1 year ago

It ain’t rocket science. Don’t live near the water and if you do, have a boat or canoe handy.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 year ago

Oh no! “Everybody” is leaving Florida!

DaveFromDenver
DaveFromDenver
1 year ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

The Titantic is unsinkable, so we’ll stay on board with our friends.

ColoradoAccountant
ColoradoAccountant
1 year ago

Rising sea levels will result in several Florida cities being underwater by 2050. Ice caps are also melting and hurricanes/ storms are contributing to the destruction of low-lying coastal areas. It has been predicted that sea levels could rise as much as eight feet by 2100.

PapaDave
PapaDave
1 year ago

Of course they will rise. But 8 feet is the worst case scenario. The best case scenario is 1 foot by 2100. Most likely we will get something in the middle; 3-4 feet.

1 foot submerges 2000 Square miles in Florida

3 feet: 4700 square miles

6 feet: 13,000 square miles (25% of Florida)

Decorate Your Walls with Mish Fine Art Images

Click each image to view details or purchase in the store.

Stay Informed

Subscribe to MishTalk

You will receive all messages from this feed and they will be delivered by email.