According to S&P Case-Shiller, gains are shrinking at record pace. Nationwide, in August, prices were 13% higher than they were last year, down from an annual gain of 15.6% in the previous month. The 10 biggest housing markets in the country rose 12.1% in the last year in August, compared to a 14.9% gain in July. The 20-city composite was up 13.1%, compared to a 16% increase the previous month.
“The forceful deceleration in U.S. housing prices that we noted a month ago continued in our report for August 2022,” wrote Craig Lazzara, managing director at S&P DJI, in a release. “Price gains decelerated in every one of our 20 cities. These data show clearly that the growth rate of housing prices peaked in the spring of 2022 and has been declining ever since.”
Leading the price gains in August were Miami, Tampa, Florida, and Charlotte, North Carolina, with year-over-year increases of 28.6%, 28% and 21.3%, respectively. All 20 cities reported lower price rises in the year ended in August versus the year ended in July.
Advertisement
Related Stories
Government + Policy
Can Limiting Hedge Funds From Buying Homes Lower Housing Prices?
Since large institutions make up just 13% of all investor homebuyers, their impact on rising home prices may not be as significant as some believe
Housing Policy + Finance
Even With Inflation Running Hot and Elevated Mortgage Rates, Buyer Demand Rises
Mortgage rates will likely stay high for the next few months, but that doesn't seem to be deterring homebuyers
Housing Policy + Finance
The Garden State Takes a New Approach to Expanding Affordable Housing
Recent legislation in New Jersey could provide inspiration for eliminating affordable housing hurdles in other places with strong housing markets