Both of the major purveyors of home price indices have been in agreement for the better part of a year that the average home is appreciating between 4 and 5 percent per year.   The FHFA House Price Index showed only a 0.1% uptick in February while the Case Shiller Home Price Index rose 0.7%.  In annual terms, Case Shiller was at 4.5% and FHFA fell from 5.0 to 3.9%. In the bigger picture, these changes don't amount to much. Things get a bit more interesting when we examine the monthly movement. First off, and more by way of a general backdrop, the past few years have seen a bigger gap between highs and lows compared to the norms established between 2014 and 2019. The more interesting month-over-month development is highlighted in the next chart. Simply put, FHFA's index dropped to 0.1 from 0.3.  That's not a big deal in and of itself, but the plot thickens when we consider the following 2 facts: These indices are not seasonally adjusted (i.e. they show typical seasonal price patterns when viewed in a month-over-month interval) February (the most recent month available, released this week) almost always coincides with FHFA's index topping out for the year and Case Shiller's index in the midst of its normal springtime upswing. True to form, Case Shiller (the orange line) is seeing the normal upswing, even if at a more muted pace.  But FHFA fell near the lowest levels of the past 12 months instead of peaking. 
MND logo
May 2, 2025
Download our Mobile App:
Download from Google Play
Download from Apple App Store
View the QR Code
Download our Mobile App:
Download from Google Play
Download from Apple App Store
Housing News
Both of the major purveyors of home price indices have been in agreement for the better part of a year that the average home is appreciating between 4 and 5 percent per year.   The FHFA House Price Index showed only a 0.1% uptick in Februa... (read more)
Housing News
Mortgage rates were in the process of falling by the end of last week, but they made additional headway during the first half of the present week.  That means this week's mortgage application survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) ma... (read more)
MBS Commentary
Data Dependence is Back, But Not in A Fun Way Bonds definitely paused their long term relationship with economic data in wake of the tariff announcement in early April, which was logical given the headli... (read more)
Mortgage Rate Watch
Mortgage rates had a nice little run, moving down from last Monday's highs of 6.98% (average, top tier 30yr fixed) to a mid-week low just over 6.80%.  Even after yesterday's modest bounce, we were still in stronger territory for the week.  ... (read more)
Rob Chrisman
Fortunately for the readers of this Commentary, we don’t receive federal funding, so it won’t be cut… Unlike groups like NPR and PBS which the Trump Administration call “biased.” Most media have advertising as a source of funding, and speaking of ads... (read more)
Mortgage Rates
MBS / Treasuries