UPDATE: US Home Prices Fell 1.8% In Nov, Government Agency Reports
January 22 2009 - 11:27AM
Dow Jones News
U.S. home prices fell a seasonally-adjusted 1.8% from October to
November, a government agency reported Thursday.
The decline was the steepest monthly drop, on a seasonally
adjusted basis, in the Federal Housing Finance Agency index's
18-year history. Overall, home prices have declined 10.5% from
their April 2007 peak, the agency said.
Home prices fell across all nine regions of the U.S., pushed
down by sales of properties seized by banks and mortgage finance
companies Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE). They plunged
along the west coast and the Rocky Mountain region, but they also
fell sharply in Midwest states such as Kansas, Iowa and South
Dakata not associated with the housing boom and bust.
The inclusion of sales of foreclosed properties may be creating
an exaggerated picture of price declines, economists say, because
such homes are often not as well maintained as owner-occupied
homes.
The impact of such sales has been "a growing problem in all
house price measures," Federal Housing Finance Agency senior
economist Andrew Leventis said. "To some extent, those homes have
seen greater quality degredation."
The index tracks only sales of single-family homes purchased
with mortgages bought by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
-By Jessica Holzer, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9228;
jessica.holzer@dowjones.com
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