Image data from Case-Shiller and the BLS, chart by Mish
Chart Notes
Not Inflation?Economists consider homes a capital expense, not a consumer expense. On that basis, homes are not in the CPI. It’s a serious ongoing mistake.
Existing Home Sales Drop 5.4 Percent But Median Price Hits New Record Existing-home sales courtesy of the National Association of Realtors (NAR)Sales are down 38.6 percent from the January 2022 high and barely above the October 2023 low (yellow highlights).Existing home sales declined 5.4 percent in June. It was the 23rd decline in 29 months. But the median price hit a new record.On July 23, I commented Existing Home Sales Drop 5.4 Percent But Median Price Hits New RecordThe median existing-home sales price bounced 4.1% from June 2023 to $426,900 – the second straight month it reached an all-time high and the twelfth consecutive month of year-over-year price gains.
The Problem With Measuring PricesCase-Shiller measures the price of the same home over time.Median and average prices have no consistency on number of rooms, square footage, location, amenities, lot size, or quality of construction.Median and average price are also skewed by a slowing number of transactions heavily influenced by price-insensitive buyers.Although median price is a poor measure, the rising direction is consistent with Case-Shiller reporting.The problem with Case-Shiller is timeliness. We are heading into August and Case-Shiller is just reporting May data. And that data represents transactions from a couple of months prior.
Signs of Severe StressThe economy is slowing and that will hit the zoomers first and the hardest, especially renters. For discussion, please see Signs of Severe Credit Card and Auto Loan Stress in Generation Z.Many who stretched too far to escape rising rents are now in trouble.So are others whose wages did not keep up with soaring rent, food, and auto insurance.The strength of this economy is vastly overrated.More By This Author:Janet Yellen Seeks $78 Trillion To Fight Climate ChangeThe Share Of Young Adults Living With Parents Is The Highest Since 1940 Expect The BLS To Revise Job Growth Down by 730,000 In 2023, More This Year