Home-price appreciation continued at a steady clip in June as many
states began reopening businesses from shutdowns related to the
coronavirus pandemic, according to a major price barometer released
Tuesday. But recent data suggests price appreciation should gain steam
in the latter half of the year.
The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city price index
posted a 3.5% year-over-year gain in June, down from 3.% the previous
month. On a monthly basis, the index increased 0.2% between May and
June.
The
separate national index released with the report noted a 4.3% increase
in home prices across the country over the past year, unchanged from the
rate of price growth in May.
Phoenix continued to lead the all other markets nationwide with
a 9% annual price gain in May, followed by Seattle with a 6.5% increase
and Tampa, Fla., with a 5.9% uptick. “As has been the case for the last
several months, prices were particularly strong in the Southeast and
West, and comparatively weak in the Midwest and (especially) Northeast,”
Craig Lazzara, managing director and global head of index investment
strategy at S&P Dow Jones Indices, wrote in the report.
Overall, the pace of price growth increased in five of the 19
cities Case-Shiller analyzed — the 20-city list again didn’t include
Detroit this month because transaction records for Wayne County, Mich.,
were unavailable, the report noted.
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