Go Symbol Lookup
Loading...

Home Prices' Gain Smallest Since '98

 Text Size  
Published: Thursday, 30 Nov 2006 | 1:51 PM ET
By: AP

Average U.S. home prices rose 7.73% over the 12 months to Sep. 30, but the quarter-to-quarter gain was the lowest since 1998 and indicates a sharp deceleration in house price gains, the U.S. Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.
Home prices rose 0.86 percent from the second to third quarter, an annualized rate of 3.45 percent and the lowest quarterly increase since the second quarter of 1998, OFHEO said.
The data "provide more evidence that the long-forecasted national deceleration in house prices is occurring," said James Lockhart, the OFHEO director.

 Print
Average U.S. home prices rose 7.73% over the 12 months to Sep. 30, but the quarter-to-quarter gain was the lowest since 1998 and indicates a sharp deceleration in house price gains, the U.S. Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.

   
Comments

 

More Comments

 
 

Add Comments

 

Your Comments (Up to 1100 characters):

Remaining characters

Your comments have not been posted yet.

Please review your submission to make sure you are comfortable with your entry.

Your Comments:


                
            
            
        

Featured

U.S. Video

  • Same-store sales dropped at Abercrombie & Fitch in its first quarter. Stacey Widlitz of S.W. Retail Advisors, discusses how to play the stock now. And Sapna Maheshwari of BuzzFeed explains her claim that top execs at the retailer are concerned about its CEO's amount of power within the company.

  • A bridge along I-5 collapsed into the Skagit River in Washington Thursday night. Business Insider reports public construction spending is at its lowest level in more than 20 years. Trying to find a solution, with CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera and Former PA Governor Ed Rendell (D).

  • CNBC's Herb Greenberg shares his investment commandments, which he originally wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle in 1995.