Royal Oak Tribune

U.S. home prices climb as tight market collides with demand uptick

- By Prashant Gopal

Home prices rose for a second straight month as buyers returning to the market competed over few homes for sale.

A measure of prices nationally increased 0.4% in March from a month earlier, according to seasonally adjusted data from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller.

Demand is picking back up in parts of the U.S. as buyers start to adjust to much higher borrowing costs that shot up starting last year. But transactio­ns remain relatively slow as homeowners are often reluctant to sell and give up lower rates, keeping inventory for previously owned

homes tight.

“Two months of increasing prices do not a definitive recovery make, but March’s results suggest that the decline in home prices that began in June 2022 may have

come to an end,” Craig Lazzara, managing director at S&P Dow Jones Indices, said in a statement.

On a yearly basis, prices rose 0.7% in March, slower than the 2.1% gain in February.

Miami and Tampa posted the biggest yearover-year increases in a measure of some of the largest metro areas.

Buyers are still confrontin­g high borrowing costs compared with a year ago. Mortgage rates have climbed recently as markets react to deliberati­ons on the U.S. debt ceiling. The average rate on a 30-year loan hit 6.57% last week, up from 3.22% in early January 2022, according to data from Freddie Mac.

“The challenges posed by current mortgage rates and the continuing possibilit­y of economic weakness are likely to remain a head wind for housing prices for at least the next several months,” Lazzara said.

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS — BLOOMBERG ?? Homes in Rocklin, California, on Dec. 6, 2022.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS — BLOOMBERG Homes in Rocklin, California, on Dec. 6, 2022.

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