Moving to Cincinnati?  Welcome to Cincinnati! The Queen City Blog is where Cincinnati real estate professionals share insights about the city and its many neighborhoods.

Before moving to Cincinnati, or in Cincinnati, read what the locals are saying first.
Your tourguides in Cincinnati Each contributor to The Queen City Blog is an active member of the local real estate community. Without spin or hype, expect frank talk and honest discussion about the city of Cincinnati and its homes.

Home Prices On The Rise, Says The October Home Price Index Report

Home Price Index April 2007 to October 2009

More positive signals from housing — home values are still on the rise.

According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, after posting its first quarterly increase since 2007 this past September, the Home Price Index rose by another 0.6 percent in October.

Prices are up in 4 of the last six months.

But before we take the stats to the proverbial bank, it’s important that we recognize the Home Price Index for its shortcomings.

  1. HPI only accounts for homes with mortgages backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac
  2. HPI only accounts for re-sold homes — newly-built homes are excluded
  3. HPI aggregates national data whereas real estate markets are local phenomena

On a broad scale, the Home Price Index can be useful, but it doesn’t specifically apply to Cincinnati or any specific U.S. market.  For that, analysts tend to turn to the Case-Shiller Index, a privately-produced report that assesses home values in 20 cities nationwide.

 

The good news for home sellers in Indian Hill is that Case-Shiller’s most recent report corroborates the government’s conclusion — home values are creeping back.

Home buyers should pay attention. When public and private sector data is in accord, markets tend to go along and, looking back, housing likely bottomed in February 2009.  Since then, home sales are up, home supplies are down, and values have increased in most U.S. markets.  Furthermore, so long as mortgage rates remain low and government stimulus is in place, the trend should continue through at least the first quarter of 2010.

If you’re on the fence about buying a home right now, or wondering about timing, consider your options vis-a-vis today’s market.  Into the new year, homes won’t likely be as cheap to buy, nor to finance.

Leave a Reply

RECENTPOSTS

AROUNDTOWN

THEWRITERS

THECOMMENTS

  • None found
Postal View  The Bearcat  Rutgers lineup introductions  Cincinnati pre-game huddle  Those guys have hops!  Rutgers Pep Band  Opening tip of Rutgers- Cincinnati  Rutgers bench during time out at end of game  Rutgers pre-game warmups