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Home Prices Surge Nearly 3 Percent

By J.W. ELPHINSTONE
,
AP
posted: 91 DAYS 18 HOURS AGO
filed under: Financial Crisis
Text SizeAAA
NEW YORK (Aug. 25) - U.S. home prices posted their first quarterly increase in three years, signaling the housing market has turned a corner.
The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller's U.S. National Home Price Index released Tuesday rose nearly 3 percent from the first quarter to 133, though that reading is still down almost 15 percent from the second quarter last year.
Home prices are at levels not seen since early 2003. Prices have fallen 30 percent from the peak in the second quarter of 2006.
The monthly index of 20 major cities increased 1.4 percent from May to June to 142, the second straight month the index registered a gain. All but two cities, Las Vegas and Detroit, saw home prices rise, and Dallas and Denver clocked their fourth-straight monthly increase.
Prices, however, have a long way to go to recover completely. Every metro showed annual declines, with fifteen reporting double-digit drops.
The Case-Shiller index is a composite of home price indexes for the nine U.S. census divisions. The 20-city index measures home price increases and decreases relative to prices in January 2000. The base reading is 100; so a reading of 150 would mean that home prices increased 50 percent since the beginning of the index.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-08-25 09:29:10
COMMENTS ( 16 )
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chenjinjin1990
This comment has been deleted.
Fakeconomics100
8:34PM Aug 25 2009 
If you don't have enough money for 30% down payment or must be able to buy in 10 years. Or else don't buy a home---Also don't go for a big house that you don't need.
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Rjmmillis
10:38AM Aug 25 2009 
Yea right.and were the richest country in the world to, hell we are trillons of dollars in debt. wait untill they start repoing all the cars that they have sold to people that cant afford to pay for them, it will be just like the housing market. This is A good fairy tale.
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Cphaed
10:32AM Aug 25 2009 
PS...a house is not an **************** a place to live! looking at it like an investment is what got us into this economic problem in the first place....that, and manipulated interest rates by The Fed. when you want to retire, do you want to HAVE to sell your house to live? most of us don't!
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Cphaed
10:32AM Aug 25 2009 
PS...a house is not an **************** a place to live! looking at it like an investment is what got us into this economic problem in the first place....that, and manipulated interest rates by The Fed. when you want to retire, do you want to HAVE to sell your house to live? most of us don't!
REPLY RATING
(0 RATINGS)
 
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