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Case-Shiller Index: Home Prices Fall In August As Market Shows Signs Of Trouble

First Posted: 10/26/10 01:12 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:05 PM ET

Economy Existing Home

WASHINGTON (AP, BY ALAN ZIBEL) -- Home prices are weakening around the country, even in metro areas that were showing strength earlier in the year.

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index released Tuesday fell 0.2 percent in August from July. Fifteen of the cities showed monthly price declines. Prices are expected to drop further in the coming months.

The biggest drop came in Phoenix. Prices there fell 1.3 percent from a month earlier. And prices in three California cities that had been rebounding -- San Francisco, San Diego and Los Angeles -- fell by less than 1 percent in August from July.

Detroit, Chicago, Washington, New York and Las Vegas were the only cities to show monthly price increases. The 20-city index has risen 6.7 percent from its April 2009 bottom. But it remains nearly 28 percent below its July 2006 peak.

A higher proportion of foreclosed homes likely pushed down California markets, said David Blitzer, the S&P index's chairman. During the summer, foreclosures were moving swiftly. That was before allegations surfaced of mortgage lenders using flawed documents to foreclose on homes. Lenders responded by freezing foreclosures in many states.

Even with the declines, the San Francisco area's home prices have surged more than 21 percent from spring 2009, when they hit bottom. Prices in San Diego have risen nearly 14 percent and in Los Angeles they have increased by more than 10 percent in that same period. Home prices would have to rise by more than 50 percent in each of the markets to return to their peaks during the housing boom.

Those California cities "had come back very fast and very strongly," Blitzer said. "Prices come down when you get a lot more foreclosures."

Problems with flawed foreclosure paperwork could weaken home prices. That would happen if buyers fear purchasing foreclosed homes because the sale could be contested -- or even canceled -- if the previous owner claims the foreclosure was invalid.

In an October survey taken by the National Association of Realtors, about 23 percent of real estate agents said they have a client who is no longer interested in purchasing a foreclosed property due to the foreclosure-document mess.

In the short run, however, the documents problem could prop up sale prices if fewer foreclosed homes are put up for sale.

Home prices rose in many markets from April through July. But those increases were mostly fueled by government tax credits, which have expired. Now that the peak buying season is over, a record number of foreclosures, job concerns and weak demand from buyers are pushing prices down.

Most experts expect roughly 5 million homes to be sold through the entire year. That would be in line with last year's totals and just above sales for 2008, the worst since 1997.

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WASHINGTON (AP, BY ALAN ZIBEL) -- Home prices are weakening around the country, even in metro areas that were showing strength earlier in the year. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home pri...
WASHINGTON (AP, BY ALAN ZIBEL) -- Home prices are weakening around the country, even in metro areas that were showing strength earlier in the year. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home pri...
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
06:38 AM on 10/28/2010
Home prices are going to be falling as long as unemployment stays so high. Don't fool yourself. The market is crowded with inventory, a second wave of foreclosures is coming, more people will be underwater, bank asset values will drop forcing more tightening of credit and the whole thing spirals into the ground. Cheerleading without changing the economic conditions is kind of stupid. I see a drop of another 40% due to the "austerity" effect.
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Siebenstein
99% -Don't do what they tell you !
05:40 AM on 10/31/2010
correct.
01:44 AM on 10/27/2010
The house prices need to go to pre-bubble prices. PERIOD
12:08 PM on 10/27/2010
Are you kidding? They're hitting below prebubble prices in places like Florida, California. That's not good. And all the foreclosing is bringing prices down even more in certain areas.
05:36 PM on 10/27/2010
You are right about that. I'm in Florida and it ain't good. My expectation too, is that it will be heading lower once the mortgage fiasco is figured out and those inventories literally flood the market.
12:22 AM on 10/28/2010
There are Tplaces like this, where the houses value is close to zero dollars, their prices can be named at prehistoric levels, maybe and sadly a mirror is enouhg

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/10/27/las_vegas_foreclosures_unemployment_nevada__n_774257.html#165717

Let me know if you have information of a house with pre-bubble price in Lakewood, CA. I don't want to live alone in the desert.
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10:55 PM on 10/26/2010
This article needs to be up top...oh well
DontJustFollow
Ask not what your country can do for you...
08:28 PM on 10/26/2010
someone better call Dodd and Frank ASAP !!!
07:41 PM on 10/26/2010
Inflated market. Prices still to high. Don't buy till they drop at least 20 percent more. Don't pay any closing cost or any other fees tacked on by the mortgage handlers.
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Peter007
04:12 PM on 10/26/2010
Buying a house when prices are falling is like trying to catch a falling knife.
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Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
04:00 PM on 10/26/2010
The housing market is in trouble??? DOES THE GOVT KNOW ABOUT THIS?????
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Stewpendous
04:05 PM on 10/26/2010
They created the problem....if they want to fix it they need to stay out of it or they will continue to make it worse!
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Siebenstein
99% -Don't do what they tell you !
05:41 AM on 10/31/2010
BS
01:59 PM on 10/26/2010
Home values still have 20-25% more to drop before they reach pre-ponzi bubble levels (approx. 1995).!
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Stewpendous
03:48 PM on 10/26/2010
I agree with your comment. Although it will be bad for current homeowners (that owe more then the value of their home), it will be great for fixing the market and for future generations of home buyers.
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pasko
01:34 PM on 10/26/2010
bang up job the dems are doing.
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02:32 PM on 10/26/2010
Are you referring to the time before the greedy republican fiasco that we are living through right now?
DontJustFollow
Ask not what your country can do for you...
08:30 PM on 10/26/2010
hahahahahaha - yeah all the houses were bought by greedy republicans . . . hahahahaha man do I have a candidate for you - ZERO experience but the dude can blame ANYTHING on the republicans and people will believe him !!!!
03:17 PM on 10/26/2010
Should they lower the rate further? How about deregulating the loan industry? Until the inflated home prices, that were established by greedy people, correct to affordable prices for average American incomes, this situation will persist. now since you think someone should solve it, whats your solution? offer something up to debate instead of just launching un constructive critiques.
01:28 PM on 10/26/2010
The housing market never hit bottom and they keep trying to place false bottoms on the market with stupid policies. Housing costs need to go down much more...like the average workers wages.
03:13 PM on 10/26/2010
I agree. I'm in San Diego and have been watching prices steadily fall. I don't know how these lobbyists crunch the numbers but being on RedFin for the last year, I don't see this report reflecting reality.
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Stewpendous
04:03 PM on 10/26/2010
I have respectfully disagree with wages getting lower, they haven't really gone up in the pass 20 years...unlike inflation.... but i do agree with the rest of your comment.

Government action is what originally created this mess and all they all doing is wasting our tax money and prolonging the suffering by artificially keeping it afloat. In comparison, Ripping a Band-Aid off quickly causes less pain than pulling it away from the skin in a slow tug.
08:14 AM on 10/27/2010
Well thanks for respectfully disagreeing with me on the wages(must better than disrespectfully) but the most recent statistics show that wages have gone down $2000/year for the average worker since our dearly departed former President Reagan decreased taxes for the wealthy and shifted the tax burden onto the middle class, that is why the middle class is disappearing.
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OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
12:35 PM on 10/26/2010
"Shows Signs"? Listen, the housing market has never corrected and never been averted. No how many cheerleaders cheer, the housing market will go down.

Too many speeches, too many cheery outlooks. The core problems have never been addressed. Housing was never important to this WH.
12:26 PM on 10/26/2010
A factor believed to contribute to financial crisis is the role of investment mistakes caused by imperfection in reasoning and human behavior. False home prices index can set false expectations that appear real and can misdirect consumer mood and behavior.

Last month, the FHFA House Price Index was showing two months of decline after tax credit induced gains earlier in the year. The FHFA purchase only house price index slipped 0.5 percent in July after declining a revised 1.2 percent the month before.

The Wall Street Challenger questions the accuracy of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices pointing out that the indices weights down or eliminates data points that are market driven.

The Case-Shiller Home Price Indices methodology and its assumptions limit the system in measuring the performance of house price movement. The Case-Shiller Home Price Indices are more designed to measure the growth in value of residential real estate where the market should be rather than where the market actually is.

See article that appeared in http://thewallstreetchallenger.com/Index/Case-Shiller_HPI.htm

Distorted home price indicators can adversely affect the consumer by increasing expectations of a stabilized housing market. If these false expectations do not become reality, the result will be consumer fear.