Home prices in the United States soared in the month of March with major cities seeing an increase in prices, according to the latest results from the S&P CoreLogic Case–Shiller Indices.
The 10-city composite index saw an increase of 19.5 percent in March while the 20-city composite index rose by 21.2 percent. Both indices spiked by a higher percentage than the previous month.
Among the 20 cities in the index, the highest year-over-year gains were reported in Tampa, Florida, at 34.8 percent, Phoenix at 32.4 percent, and Miami at 32 percent. Home prices were strongest in the South with a gain of 29.8 percent, followed closely by the southeast United States with gains of 29.6 percent.
The national and the 20-city composite readings recorded the highest year-over-year price change in over 35 years.
“The strength of the Composite indices suggests very broad strength in the housing market, which we continue to observe,” said Craig J. Lazzara, managing director at S&P DJI.
“All 20 cities saw double-digit price increases for the 12 months ended in March, and price growth in 17 cities accelerated relative to February’s report. March’s price increase ranked in the top quintile of historical experience for every city, and in the top decile for 19 of them,” he said.
However, as mortgages become more expensive in response to the Federal Reserve pushing up interest rates, home price growth won’t last much longer, Lazzara said.
Florida led with a 29.8 percent gain, Arizona with 27.5 percent, Utah with 26.8 percent, Tennessee with 25.8 percent, and Idaho with 25.5 percent. In the first quarter of 2022, home prices were up by 4.6 percent compared to the fourth quarter of 2021.
“Strong demand coupled with tight supply have kept prices climbing,” said William Doerner, Ph.D., supervisory cconomist in FHFA’s Division of Research and Statistics. “Through the end of March, higher mortgage rates have not yet translated into slower price gains, but new home sales have dropped during the last few months, with a significant falloff in April.”
More sellers are also dropping their prices. In the four weeks ending May 15, nearly 18 percent of sellers reduced their prices, according to Redfin. This is the highest proportion since October 2020.