
Us home prices gains accelerate in october for 2nd month
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U.S. home prices rose faster in October than the previous month as many would-be buyers competed for a limited supply of available properties. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home
price index rose 2.2% in October from a year ago, up from a 2.1% annual gain in September. The Tuesday report suggests that home price increases are being revived after the pace of gains
hit a seven-year low in July. The Federal Reserve's three cuts to short-term interest rates in 2019 have accelerated sales of new and existing homes. The sales pickup may now be pushing
up prices more quickly. A newly constructed single family home is shown as sold in Encinitas, California, July 31, 2019. Mike Blake | Reuters The cities with the largest price gains were
Phoenix, where prices rose 5.8%, followed by Tampa, at 4.9%, and Charlotte at 4.8%. The pick-up in prices was broad-based: Twelve of the 20 cities in the index reported faster annual home
price gains in October than in September. Craig Lazzara, managing director at S&P Dow Jones Indices, which compiles the index, warned that it is still too soon to say whether home price
increases have fully reversed their slowdown or if the past two months are just a blip. Mortgage rates have fallen from roughly 4.6% to 3.7% in the past year. That's lifted sales of
existing homes 2.4% from a year earlier and sales of new homes by more than 7%. "Teamed with a resilient job market, low mortgage rates have helped boost home buyer demand," said
Matthew Speakman, an economist at real estate data provider Zillow. "An extreme shortage of for-sale listings, particularly at lower price points, remains a concern and may ultimately
result in a sharper re-acceleration in home prices than expected."