Life & Real Estate in Eugene, Springfield & Lane County, Oregon

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What a difference a decade has made - in home prices in America's largest metro areas as measured by the Case-Shiller Index! How did your metro area shake out?

The Case-Shiller Index metro areas are:   Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix, Portland, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Tampa and Washington, DC.

 


Are home prices the same all over America.  Of course not.  That would violate that age-old real estate axiom:  Location, Location, Location. Indeed, home price vary greatly by location on both a local and national basis.

But it' not just the actual price level that varies, it's also the rate of appreciation through which different locales achieve that price variety. Those appreciation levels have fluctuated wildly across the country.

Nothing makes that more clear than looking closely at the difference in home appreciation experienced over the last decade in the twenty major metropolitan areas measured by the Case-Shiller Index.

(The Index is published monthly by Standard and Poors and the Wall Street Journal.   The January, 2010 numbers were published only recently.  The Index is the premier measure of changes in home value.  Prices from metro to metro are compared indexing the actual dollar prices, with January, 2000 prices being set to zero.)

 

Final Impact of the Last Decade
on Home Values
In the 20 Metropolitan Areas of  the

Chart - Comparison of Percentage Increase in Home Prices, January, 2000 to January, 2010 - Case-Shiller Index - Jim Hale, Principal Broker, ACTIONAGENTS.NET

 

Home values increased most over the decade in Washington, DC and New York, our political and financial capitals, where values increased by 76% and 74% , respectively.  No wonder policy makers in both power centers seem so insulated from the real world.  They actually are living in Oz.

Detroit is at the opposite end of the chart...having fallen, as it were, clear off the chart ...the year 2000 baseline - with a loss in value of nearly 30%.  

Talk about night and day.  The difference is astonishing.

But even more astounding is how our twenty cities and their home prices got to the decade end.

 

Highest Home Prices Attained
at the Height of the Boom
In the 20 Metropolitan Areas of  the

 

Chart - Comparison of Percentage Increase in Home Prices, January, 2000 to Decade Highs - Case-Shiller Index - Jim Hale, Principal Broker, ACTIONAGENTS.NET

 

While none or the 20 cities finished the decade having recorded a doubling of home prices, nearly half did see a doubling at the height of the housing boom.

Miami and Los Angeles saw prices nearly triple, with appreciation of 181% and 174% over year-2000 values.   Washington and San Diego saw prices ascend to 2 1/2 times the year-2000 level.

Tampa, Las Vegas, Phoenix, San Francisco,and New York did see a doubling of prices.

Seattle, Portand, Boston and Minneapolis all came close.  Even Chicago saw prices top out at a 2/3 increase.

But as you can see from the two charts below, the highs of mid-decade seem wildly disconnected from the reality of January, 2010.  Some of the highs have truly been brought low.  But not all of those have hit the same rocky bottom.  

How the Decade Highs Compare
to the Decade End
In the 20 Metropolitan Areas of  the


Chart - Comparison of Percentage Increase in Home Prices, 2000-2010 Decade Highs to Decade End - Case-Shiller Index - Jim Hale, Principal Broker, ACTIONAGENTS.NET




Here is the same data, re-sorted:

 

How the Decade End Compares
to the Decade Highs
In the 20 Metropolitan Areas of  the


Chart - Comparison of Percentage Increase in Home Prices, 2000-2010 Decade End to Decade Highs - Case-Shiller Index - Jim Hale, Principal Broker, ACTIONAGENTS.NET


What will the next decade bring? Very likely:  More of the same mysterious variation in home prices. But it seems clear that the highs will come anywhere near the "irrational exuberance" in housing we experienced in the decade just past.

 

 

 

 ***********************

 

Jim Hale

Principal Broker / Owner

Graduate, REALTOR Institute             e-PRO

Member, Million Dollar Club of Lane County

Member, Real Estate Brokers Million Dollar Club


actionagents.net
1715 Linnea Avenue
Eugene, OR 97401-1962

Office:  541-484-0219
Direct:  541-543-9991
Fax:      541-485-8068

www.actionagents.net                jim@actionagents.net

Company Logo - ACTIONAGENTS.NET - Eugene, OR - Jim Hale, Principal                       Broker


© 2010  All Rights Reserved

 



 

 

 

 ***********************

 

Jim Hale

Principal Broker / Owner

Graduate, REALTOR Institute             e-PRO

2012 Member, Million Dollar Club of Lane County

2012 Member, Real Estate Brokers Million Dollar Club


actionagents.net
1715 Linnea Avenue
Eugene, OR 97401-1962

Office:  541-484-0219
Direct:  541-543-9991
Fax:      541-485-8068

Eugene Oregon Homes / Real Estate               jim@actionagents.net

Company Logo - ACTIONAGENTS.NET - Eugene, OR - Jim Hale, Principal                      Broker

All statistical market data is based on information from the RMLS of Oregon for the dates indicated.
© 2012  All Rights Reserved  /  Licensed in the State of OREGON

Comments

Thank you for sharing the information. I was surprised that Philadelphia is not mentioned.

Posted by GITA BANTWAL, REALTOR,ABR,CRS,SRES,GRI BUCKS County & Philadelphia, PA HOMES (RE/MAX Centre Realtors) about 2 years ago

Wow Detriot will soon be a small city ! And Miami is probably short sale city right about now !

Posted by Michael J. Perry, Lancaster Relo Specialist (KELLER WILLIAMS Realty Lancaster, PA.) about 2 years ago

Gita -

Philly is not one of the 20 metro areas covered by Case-Shiller.  It probably should be - as should Houston and a few others.

Michael -

Detroit is not going to be small soon but it already has big problems - all made worse by falling property values and local tax receipts.

Posted by Jim Hale - On the MOVE for You! Eugene - Springfield Oregon Real Estate (ACTIONAGENTS.NET) about 2 years ago

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