By Stan Humphries
Home values fell three percent in the first quarter of this year, marking a pace of decline not seen since 2008 when the housing recession was at its worst. Home values fell one percent between February and March and 8.2 percent from March 2010. The cumulative decline in home values since the market peak is now 29.5 percent (see Figures 1 and 2).
There was little escaping the housing downturn in Q1 2011. With only one metro showing positive year-over-year change (Honolulu MSA), and one remaining flat (Pittsburgh MSA), the vast majority of U.S. markets logged declines over the past 12 months. The metros hit hardest were geographically diverse with Ocala, FL, Pueblo, CO, Detroit and Atlanta experiencing the sharpest yearly declines.
Continue reading the article . . .
Related reading:
The Housing Industry Crisis
Ramblings of a Woman(18 Sept 10)
Solari Report Blog Commentaries
Catherine on Mortgage Market Bubbles, “Piratization” and & Other Frauds
(23 March 11)
Home Prices Hit New Lows
(22 Feb 11)
Trends in Metropolitan America, 2000 to 2008
(25 Jan 10)