Home values drop for the first time in seven years

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

The Original
Bushed
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
338,367
Reputation
-35,152
Daps
641,744
Reppin
The Deep State
Home values drop for the first time in seven years

curbed.com
Home values drop for the first time in seven years
Jeff Andrews
3-4 minutes
Signals in the housing market have been pointing to a potential drop in home prices for almost a year now, and according to a new report from listings giant Zillow, it’s finally happened.

The company published data for the month of April that show the median home value has dropped compared to a month ago in each of the 35 biggest markets in the U.S., except for New York, which didn’t change at all.

This collective dip in markets across the county caused the median home value for the U.S. as a whole to drop by 0.1 percent, the first time the median home value dropped nationally in seven years.

Zillow’s median home value is its “Zestimate,” an estimation of home values in a city calculated in part based on sales in the area.

Home prices have been on the upswing since the housing market bottomed out after the financial crisis of 2008, when millions lost their homes to foreclosure and prices went into free fall, a dramatic collapse thought to be unthinkable in the usually steady housing market.

Over time, home prices recovered and eventually surpassed their pre-crisis peaks. Heading into the summer of 2018, the number of homes for sale was so low that one realtor Curbed spoke with predicted that summer would be “the most competitive housing market in recorded history.”

But the anticipated bidding wars over the few houses that were for sale never materialized. The number of homes for sale started rising as homes went unsold, particularly on the West Coast. In hot markets like San Jose, San Francisco, and Seattle, inventory has risen by triple digit percentages year-over-year for most of the last year.

Demand for housing remains strong because the economy is doing well. Supply suddenly spiking to the degree seen on the West Coast suggests that people simply can’t afford the steep asking prices anymore. The Zillow report is the first strong sign that home values are finally coming down. And given that late spring and summer are prime homebuying seasons with strong demand, a drop in value is even more significant.

But there are caveats to the report. First, as Zillow notes, month-to-month home values can be volatile; it’s possible prices will snap back up in the company’s May data like the April drop never happened. Second, the year-over-year home values—an indicator that removes the seasonality effect that can be present in the housing market—still rose, and by a health amount—6.1 percent. It will take a few months of drops before this can be considered a trend.

Still, the market has shown signs for a year now that affordability has been stretched too thin, so this could very well be the beginning of a mild correction in home prices, or at least a softening in home price appreciation.
 

The Prince of All Saiyans

Formerly Jisoo Stan & @Twitter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
72,683
Reputation
9,370
Daps
124,981
giphy.gif
 

hatealot

Banned
Joined
Jan 22, 2017
Messages
13,656
Reputation
2,264
Daps
51,348
I swear the market makers be pushing this buy a home shyt on every upcoming generation to keep the markets upfloat. Times are changing and people do not want to be committed mortages for 20+ years if they don't have to. People already switching jobs more than ever, there is more options to work remotely, and people aren't getting married as much.
 

hashmander

Hale End
Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2013
Messages
21,290
Reputation
5,668
Daps
91,489
Reppin
The Arsenal
i'm so glad i bought 2 homes in orlando during the 09-11 good times. one to live in and one to rent. the rental home is paid off, but i have a mortgage on the house i live in. rent in this market has climbed so rapidly (from around 800 for a 2br apt in 2011 to 1280 today) that what i'm renting out the house for easily covers my housing expenses (mortgage, insurance on both places, maintenance, etc).
 

the cac mamba

Veteran
Joined
May 21, 2012
Messages
112,816
Reputation
14,185
Daps
318,318
Reppin
NULL
i'm so glad i bought 2 homes in orlando during the 09-11 good times. one to live in and one to rent. the rental home is paid off, but i have a mortgage on the house i live in. rent in this market has climbed so rapidly (from around 800 for a 2br apt in 2011 to 1280 today) that what i'm renting out the house for easily covers my housing expenses (mortgage, insurance on both places, maintenance, etc).
dope :ehh::jaymelo:
 
Joined
Feb 5, 2017
Messages
1,662
Reputation
45
Daps
7,924
If only this was true but I don't see that happening in my neck of the woods in San Diego. Your looking at a million + for a decent SFR in my neighbourhood. Good thing I bought in 11 my place or else I'd scoff at paying 1.2+ million for my house.
 
Top