Home prices in the U.S. declined for a sixth straight month, sending a key index of values down 2.7% from its peak in June.
Prices nationally fell 0.3% in December from the month before, according to seasonally adjusted data from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller.
Seattle and San Francisco clocked another month among the fastest-cooling housing markets.
Seattle-area home prices dipped 1.8% from November to December, the seventh consecutive month of decline. Seattle-area prices were also down 1.8% compared to December 2021, the region’s first year-over-year price drop since 2019, according to the index.
The index tracks single-family home prices in King, Snohomish and Pierce counties and lags by two months. Since December, the local market has begun to pick up slightly, though sales are still slower than prior years.
Unlike in the Seattle area, prices nationwide in December were still higher than they were a year earlier, but the pace of gains has cooled. The national index, not seasonally adjusted, was up 5.8% annually, down from the 7.6% gain in November.
Buyers pulled back from the market toward the end of 2022, slammed by mortgage rates that had more than doubled since that January. Affordability had already been stretched by prices that soared to record highs throughout the pandemic. As the boom fizzled and sales declined, the total value of U.S. homes tumbled by $2.3 billion in the second half of the year, according to a report last week by Redfin.
With competition easing, home shoppers who were determined to seal a deal gained a little leverage in negotiations with sellers.
Slightly lower mortgage rates at the start of the year gave buyers some incentive. Contracts to purchase previously owned US homes rose 8.1% in January from December, the biggest jump since June 2020, the National Association of Realtors reported Monday.
But the path ahead for housing may be bumpy heading into the key spring selling season. Borrowing costs have climbed through February, and the Federal Reserve has signaled it’s inclined to continue hiking its benchmark rate to battle inflation. That’s likely to keep a lid on demand from would-be buyers and discourage current owners with low-rate mortgages from listing their properties.
At the same time, homes that are on the market have been lingering longer, which may push sellers to resort to deeper discounts.
“The prospect of stable, or higher, interest rates means that mortgage financing remains a headwind for home prices, while economic weakness, including the possibility of a recession, may also constrain potential buyers,” Craig Lazzara, managing director at S&P Dow Jones Indices, said in a statement Tuesday. “Given these prospects for a challenging macroeconomic environment, home prices may well continue to weaken.”
source: seattletimes