Home prices pick up steam in December: Case-Shiller

The U.S. saw the 19th consecutive month with price gains for homes

Home prices pick up steam in December: Case-Shiller

The U.S. saw the 19th consecutive month with price gains for homes

U.S. home prices gains accelerated slightly to end the year but the gains are well off the record increases of a few years ago, according to Case-Shiller.

Case-Shiller’s U.S. National Home Price Index rose 3.9% year over year in December, up from an annual gain of 3.7% the month before.

The 10- and 20-city composite indices were up 5% and 4.5%, respectively, Case-Shiller reported. The gains in both those indices were also slightly up from the previous month.

New York reported the highest annual gain among the 20 cities with a 7.2% annual increase in December, followed by Chicago (6.6%) and Boston (6.3%).  By contrast, Tampa, Florida, saw prices fall 1.1% annually, the most of any city.  

Home price growth also stalled in the West in the second half of the year. San Francisco saw a 4.5% decline through the summer and fall, while prices in Seattle and San Diego dropped 3% and 2.9%, respectively.

Nationally, though, the overall index achieved an all-time high for the 19th consecutive month. However, the aggregate annual gain in U.S. home prices has slowed from a 2021 peak of nearly 19%.

The market is “seeing below-trend growth over the history of the index,” said Brian D. Luke, head of commodities, Real & Digital Assets at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

Author

  • Victor Whitman is a contributing writer for Scotsman Guide and a former editor of the publication’s commercial magazine. 

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