U.S. News

Case-Schiller index points to continued headwinds for housing prices

By Daniel J. Graeber   |   March 28, 2023 at 12:49 PM
The Case-Schiller index for home prices show the market is cooling off, though would-be buyers are staying on the sidelines because of higher lending rates. File photo by Alexis C. Glenn/UPI The U.S. housing market continues to cool off, with the exception of the south were home prices in cities such as Miami continue to show prices are on the rise. File photo by Alexis C. Glenn/UPI

March 28 (UPI) -- Higher lending rates and prospects for continued U.S. economic weakness could keep a lid on housing prices for several months, analysis from S&P Dow Jones Indices found Tuesday.

The S&P CoreLogic Case-Schiller U.S. National Home Price NSA Index showed a gain of 3.5% in January, a decline from the 5.6% expansion from December. A 10-city composite, meanwhile, showed an increase of 2.5%, compared with 4.4% the previous month.

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The National Association of Realtors in a separate report put the average price for an existing home at around $363,000, a 0.2% decline relative to year-ago levels. That snaps a streak that began more than a decade ago.

Craig J. Lazzara, the managing director at S&P Dow Jones Indices, said concerns about a looming financial downturn suggests prices won't recover much.

"Mortgage financing and the prospect of economic weakness are therefore likely to remain a headwind for housing prices for at least the next several months," he said.

Weakness would come as a result of efforts to control consumer-level inflation. The U.S. Federal Reserve last week hiked its lending rate by 25 percentage points as result of inflation running at about three times its target rate of 2% annually. That came despite lingering concerns the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in California was the start of a broader crisis in the global finance sector.

Higher rates from the Fed translate to a higher cost of borrowing for consumers. A 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage has an average 6.5% interest rate, up from 4.16% at this time last year.

While prices are on the decline, higher lending rates may be keeping some would-be buyers on the sidelines. Data from the NAR show that first-time buyers were responsible for 27% of existing-home sales last month, down from 31% in January and 29% in February 2022.

S&P found there was a silver lining in the U.S. South, where prices are showing resilience against broader economic trends. Nevertheless, Lazzara said that "January's market weakness was broadly based."