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San Diego home prices in April to outpace nation, state

San Diego County home prices in April continued to outpace the rest of the state and nation for the third month in a row, said the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices released Tuesday.

The indices, adjusted for seasonal swings, showed San Diego County home prices rose 6.6 percent in a year. Prices increased 5.5 percent nationwide, down from 5.8 percent in March and missing some analysts’ expectations.

Los Angeles prices increased 5.3 percent in the same time period and San Francisco by 5 percent. Of the 20 major regions followed by the indices, San Diego ranked No. 8 in April, above Chicago, New York, Miami, Washington, D.C., and other markets.

Low mortgage rates and lack of homes for sale throughout the nation are continuing to push prices up, wrote David Blitzer, managing chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices, in the monthly report.

“The question is not if home prices can climb without any limit; they can’t,” he wrote. “Rather, will home price gains gently slow or will they crash and take the economy down with them?”

Blitzer wrote that a crash will likely be avoided, at the moment, because housing starts are trending higher and rising prices may encourage some owners to sell. Also, nationwide outstanding mortgage debt — $14.4 trillion — is about $400 billion below the record set in 2008.

Read more at: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/real-estate/sd-fi-case-shiller-april-20170627-story.html

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San Diego home Price hits new record

sd home price

The San Diego County median home price hit $530,000 in May, breaking the nominal record set last month and increasing 8.2 percent in a year, real estate tracker CoreLogic reported Wednesday.

Lack of homes for sale and slowed home construction appear to be major forces in new peaks set over the past few months leading into the traditional busy summer buying season.

In real terms, May’s numbers still are far off the peaks of the housing boom. When adjusted for inflation, the county nominal November 2005 peak of $517,500 equates to roughly $644,500 in 2016 dollars.

Alan Gin, economist at University of San Diego, said it is likely that nominal records will continue to be broken as the summer continues, especially with a strong economy and low unemployment rate.

“Construction is still lagging badly. There’s just not enough housing,” Gin said. “High demand and low supply mean higher prices.”

In May, there were 5,060 homes listed for sale in San Diego County, up by 279 from April but substantially below historic levels for the month, said the Greater San Diego Association of Realtors. There were 5,913 listings in May last year, 6,658 in 2015 and 7,029 in 2014.

read more at: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/real-estate/sd-fi-corelogic-20170621-story.html

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Housing bubble outside USA

Home prices in the U.S. are rising to new levels, even surpassing pre-crisis levels in some metros, but home prices in the U.S. are relatively low compared to other developed nations.

Over the past few years in the U.S., home prices peaked in July 2006, troughed in February 2012 and have since returned to pre-crisis levels once again. However, this wasn’t the case for other developed nations. Other G10 economies never saw a downturn, and have continued increasing.

Now, some are concerned about broader consequences if the real estate markets go south, according to a report from Goldman Sachs. The report explains there are no imminent problems in G10 markets, but current imbalances could worsen cyclical weakness later.

read more at: http://www.housingwire.com/articles/40139-heres-how-us-home-prices-compare-to-other-developed-nations

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