« Defaults on credit card bills in US rising | Main | Has Your Firm Adapted to the Blurred Boundary between the Internet and Your Products and Services? »

Case-Shiller US National Home Price Index - 2nd Quarter

cs82007.jpg


Standard & Poors [82K pdf]:

Data through June released today by Standard & Poor’s for its S&P/Case-Shiller® Home Price Indices, the leading measure of U.S. home prices, shows continued negative annual returns in the U.S. National Home Price Index, the 10-City Composite and the 20-City Composite, as well as 15 of the 20 metro area indices.

The chart above, depicting the annual returns of the U.S. National Home Price Index, the 10-City Composite, and the 20-City Composite shows all three still yielding negative returns as of June 2007. The quarterly S&P/Case-Shiller® U.S. National Home Price Index - which covers all nine U.S. census divisions - was down 0.9% from Q1 2007 and down 3.2% from Q2 2006.

“The pullback in the U.S. residential real estate market is showing no signs of slowing down,” says Robert J. Shiller, Chief Economist at MacroMarkets LLC. “The year-over-year decline reported in the 2nd quarter of 2007 for the National Home Price Index is the lowest point in its reported history, which dates back to January 1987. On a regional level 17 of the 20 metro areas are showing declines in their annual growth rate from what was reported in May.”

Much more on Case-Shiller at www.macromarkets.com.

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on August 30, 2007 9:47 AM.

The previous post in this blog was Defaults on credit card bills in US rising.

The next post in this blog is Has Your Firm Adapted to the Blurred Boundary between the Internet and Your Products and Services?.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.