0
0

Case Shiller graphs showing a short term trend toward price decline


 invite response                
2014 May 27, 4:06am   2,124 views  3 comments

by FunTime   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

Always surprised when these don't show up right away here. I'm probably duplicating someone else.

https://www.spice-indices.com/idpfiles/spice-assets/resources/public/documents/93729_cshomeprice-release-0527.pdf?force_download=true

My summary: House prices went way up then way down. A lot of people got burned. Prices went way up, but not as much, so people were determined not to miss it this time and either bought or sold depending on their situation. From here, the housing market sits for at least a half generation. With institutional investors having exited and retirees having sold at a premium, so few will be affected by price swings that nobody will care. Interest rates will rise so that banks and people will real money can continue to make more real money and influence politics.

#housing

Comments 1 - 3 of 3        Search these comments

1   tatupu70   2014 May 27, 4:11am  

There is a difference between a decline and a declining rate of increase.

The C-S is showing a slower rate of price growth.

2   FunTime   2014 May 27, 4:20am  

Yeah, I'm going to change the title. My error in misleading as I forgot that the y axis was %.

Nothing to see hear! Prices are going up! Just not as fast.

3   Eman   2014 May 27, 4:26am  

No doubt. If history is any indication, the rate of increase should be muted this year. My guess is mid single digit.

Looking at the index for the 20 cities, I wonder why Detroit and Cleveland are so affordable while Los Angeles and San Francisco are so expensive. As usual, something is cheap for a reason, and something is expensive for a reason. There's no free lunch.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste