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The current value of the Case Shiller Home Price Index Month-over-Month (MoM) in United States is 1.6 %. The Case Shiller Home Price Index Month-over-Month (MoM) in United States increased to 1.6 % on 3/1/2024, after it was 0.9 % on 2/1/2024. From 2/1/2000 to 4/1/2024, the average GDP in United States was 0.42 %. The all-time high was reached on 3/1/2022 with 3.1 %, while the lowest value was recorded on 1/1/2009 with -2.8 %.
Case Shiller Home Price Index Month-over-Month (MoM) ·
3 years
5 years
10 years
25 Years
Max
Case-Shiller Home Price Index MoM | |
---|---|
2/1/2000 | 0.8 % |
3/1/2000 | 1.2 % |
4/1/2000 | 1.5 % |
5/1/2000 | 1.6 % |
6/1/2000 | 1.5 % |
7/1/2000 | 0.9 % |
8/1/2000 | 0.8 % |
9/1/2000 | 0.7 % |
10/1/2000 | 0.6 % |
11/1/2000 | 0.7 % |
12/1/2000 | 0.7 % |
1/1/2001 | 0.7 % |
2/1/2001 | 0.6 % |
3/1/2001 | 0.9 % |
4/1/2001 | 1 % |
5/1/2001 | 0.8 % |
6/1/2001 | 0.9 % |
7/1/2001 | 0.8 % |
8/1/2001 | 0.8 % |
9/1/2001 | 0.6 % |
10/1/2001 | 0.4 % |
11/1/2001 | 0.2 % |
1/1/2002 | 0.2 % |
2/1/2002 | 0.3 % |
3/1/2002 | 1 % |
4/1/2002 | 1.3 % |
5/1/2002 | 1.6 % |
6/1/2002 | 1.6 % |
7/1/2002 | 1.4 % |
8/1/2002 | 1.2 % |
9/1/2002 | 0.9 % |
10/1/2002 | 0.8 % |
11/1/2002 | 0.6 % |
12/1/2002 | 0.6 % |
1/1/2003 | 0.4 % |
2/1/2003 | 0.4 % |
3/1/2003 | 0.7 % |
4/1/2003 | 1 % |
5/1/2003 | 1.1 % |
6/1/2003 | 0.9 % |
7/1/2003 | 1.1 % |
8/1/2003 | 1.1 % |
9/1/2003 | 1.2 % |
10/1/2003 | 1.1 % |
11/1/2003 | 0.9 % |
12/1/2003 | 0.9 % |
1/1/2004 | 0.8 % |
2/1/2004 | 0.9 % |
3/1/2004 | 1.6 % |
4/1/2004 | 1.9 % |
5/1/2004 | 2 % |
6/1/2004 | 2 % |
7/1/2004 | 1.6 % |
8/1/2004 | 1.1 % |
9/1/2004 | 1 % |
10/1/2004 | 0.8 % |
11/1/2004 | 0.7 % |
12/1/2004 | 0.7 % |
1/1/2005 | 0.9 % |
2/1/2005 | 1.2 % |
3/1/2005 | 1.6 % |
4/1/2005 | 1.6 % |
5/1/2005 | 1.6 % |
6/1/2005 | 1.5 % |
7/1/2005 | 1.4 % |
8/1/2005 | 1.2 % |
9/1/2005 | 1.2 % |
10/1/2005 | 1 % |
11/1/2005 | 0.8 % |
12/1/2005 | 0.5 % |
1/1/2006 | 0.2 % |
2/1/2006 | 0.4 % |
3/1/2006 | 0.2 % |
4/1/2006 | 0.6 % |
5/1/2006 | 0.5 % |
6/1/2006 | 0.3 % |
7/1/2006 | 0.1 % |
5/1/2009 | 0.5 % |
6/1/2009 | 1.4 % |
7/1/2009 | 1.7 % |
8/1/2009 | 1.2 % |
9/1/2009 | 0.4 % |
4/1/2010 | 0.9 % |
5/1/2010 | 1.3 % |
6/1/2010 | 1 % |
7/1/2010 | 0.6 % |
4/1/2011 | 0.6 % |
5/1/2011 | 1 % |
6/1/2011 | 1.2 % |
7/1/2011 | 1 % |
8/1/2011 | 0.1 % |
4/1/2012 | 1.4 % |
5/1/2012 | 2.4 % |
6/1/2012 | 2.3 % |
7/1/2012 | 1.6 % |
8/1/2012 | 0.9 % |
9/1/2012 | 0.3 % |
12/1/2012 | 0.2 % |
2/1/2013 | 0.2 % |
3/1/2013 | 1.3 % |
4/1/2013 | 2.6 % |
5/1/2013 | 2.5 % |
6/1/2013 | 2.2 % |
7/1/2013 | 1.8 % |
8/1/2013 | 1.3 % |
9/1/2013 | 0.7 % |
10/1/2013 | 0.2 % |
3/1/2014 | 0.9 % |
4/1/2014 | 1.2 % |
5/1/2014 | 1.1 % |
6/1/2014 | 1 % |
7/1/2014 | 0.6 % |
8/1/2014 | 0.2 % |
2/1/2015 | 0.5 % |
3/1/2015 | 0.9 % |
4/1/2015 | 1.1 % |
5/1/2015 | 1.1 % |
6/1/2015 | 1 % |
7/1/2015 | 0.7 % |
8/1/2015 | 0.3 % |
9/1/2015 | 0.1 % |
2/1/2016 | 0.2 % |
3/1/2016 | 1 % |
4/1/2016 | 1.1 % |
5/1/2016 | 0.9 % |
6/1/2016 | 0.8 % |
7/1/2016 | 0.6 % |
8/1/2016 | 0.3 % |
9/1/2016 | 0.1 % |
11/1/2016 | 0.2 % |
12/1/2016 | 0.2 % |
1/1/2017 | 0.2 % |
2/1/2017 | 0.4 % |
3/1/2017 | 1 % |
4/1/2017 | 1 % |
5/1/2017 | 0.9 % |
6/1/2017 | 0.7 % |
7/1/2017 | 0.7 % |
8/1/2017 | 0.4 % |
9/1/2017 | 0.3 % |
10/1/2017 | 0.2 % |
11/1/2017 | 0.2 % |
12/1/2017 | 0.2 % |
1/1/2018 | 0.3 % |
2/1/2018 | 0.7 % |
3/1/2018 | 1 % |
4/1/2018 | 0.9 % |
5/1/2018 | 0.7 % |
6/1/2018 | 0.6 % |
7/1/2018 | 0.3 % |
2/1/2019 | 0.1 % |
3/1/2019 | 0.7 % |
4/1/2019 | 0.8 % |
5/1/2019 | 0.6 % |
6/1/2019 | 0.4 % |
7/1/2019 | 0.2 % |
9/1/2019 | 0.1 % |
10/1/2019 | 0.1 % |
11/1/2019 | 0.1 % |
2/1/2020 | 0.5 % |
3/1/2020 | 1.1 % |
4/1/2020 | 0.8 % |
5/1/2020 | 0.3 % |
6/1/2020 | 0.3 % |
7/1/2020 | 0.8 % |
8/1/2020 | 1.2 % |
9/1/2020 | 1.3 % |
10/1/2020 | 1.4 % |
11/1/2020 | 1.1 % |
12/1/2020 | 0.9 % |
1/1/2021 | 1 % |
2/1/2021 | 1.3 % |
3/1/2021 | 2.3 % |
4/1/2021 | 2.2 % |
5/1/2021 | 2.1 % |
6/1/2021 | 2 % |
7/1/2021 | 1.5 % |
8/1/2021 | 0.9 % |
9/1/2021 | 0.9 % |
10/1/2021 | 0.8 % |
11/1/2021 | 1 % |
12/1/2021 | 1.1 % |
1/1/2022 | 1.4 % |
2/1/2022 | 2.5 % |
3/1/2022 | 3.1 % |
4/1/2022 | 2.3 % |
5/1/2022 | 1.5 % |
6/1/2022 | 0.4 % |
2/1/2023 | 0.2 % |
3/1/2023 | 1.5 % |
4/1/2023 | 1.6 % |
5/1/2023 | 1.4 % |
6/1/2023 | 0.9 % |
7/1/2023 | 0.6 % |
8/1/2023 | 0.4 % |
9/1/2023 | 0.2 % |
10/1/2023 | 0.1 % |
2/1/2024 | 0.9 % |
3/1/2024 | 1.6 % |
Case Shiller Home Price Index Month-over-Month (MoM) History
Date | Value |
---|---|
3/1/2024 | 1.6 % |
2/1/2024 | 0.9 % |
10/1/2023 | 0.1 % |
9/1/2023 | 0.2 % |
8/1/2023 | 0.4 % |
7/1/2023 | 0.6 % |
6/1/2023 | 0.9 % |
5/1/2023 | 1.4 % |
4/1/2023 | 1.6 % |
3/1/2023 | 1.5 % |
Similar Macro Indicators to Case Shiller Home Price Index Month-over-Month (MoM)
Name | Current | Previous | Frequency |
---|---|---|---|
🇺🇸 15-Year Mortgage Rate | 5.99 % | 6 % | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 30-Year Mortgage Rate | 6.86 % | 6.87 % | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 Average House Prices | 501,000 USD | 486,500 USD | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Average Mortgage Size | 405,490 USD | 405,400 USD | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 Building Permits | 1.425 M | 1.47 M | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Building Permits MoM | -3.1 % | 4.6 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Case-Shiller Home Price Index | 333.21 points | 329.95 points | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Case-Shiller Home Price Index YoY | 7.2 % | 7.5 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Construction Spending | -0.1 % | 0.3 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Existing Home Sales | 3.84 M | 3.88 M | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Existing Home Sales MoM | -1 % | -2 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Home Price Index MoM | 0 % | 0.3 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Homeownership Rate | 65.6 % | 65.6 % | Quarter |
🇺🇸 Housing Index | 424.3 points | 423.3 points | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Housing Price Index YoY | 6.3 % | 6.7 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Housing starts | 1.354 M units | 1.361 M units | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Housing Starts MoM | -0.5 % | 7.8 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 MBA Mortgage Market Index | 212 points | 210.4 points | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 MBA Mortgage Refinancing Index | 552.4 points | 552.7 points | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 MBA Purchase Index | 133.3 points | 130.8 points | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 Mortgage applications | 0.8 % | 0.9 % | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 Mortgage Interest Rate | 6.93 % | 6.94 % | frequency_weekly |
🇺🇸 Mortgage Originations | 448.31 B USD | 374.11 B USD | Quarter |
🇺🇸 Multi-family Housing Starts | 278,000 units | 310,000 units | Monthly |
🇺🇸 NAHB Housing Market Index | 42 points | 43 points | Monthly |
🇺🇸 National House Price Index | 322.25 points | 321.205 points | Monthly |
🇺🇸 New Home Sales | 619,000 units | 698,000 units | Monthly |
🇺🇸 New Home Sales MoM | -11.3 % | 2 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Pending Home Sales | -6.6 % | -7.4 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Pending Home Sales MoM | -2.1 % | -7.7 % | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Price-Rent Ratio | 134.247 | 134.659 | Quarter |
🇺🇸 Residential property prices | 4.67 % | 5.27 % | Quarter |
🇺🇸 Single-family home prices | 404,500 USD | 414,200 USD | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Single-Family Home Starts | 982,000 units | 1.036 M units | Monthly |
🇺🇸 Total Housing stock | 1.39 M | 1.37 M | Monthly |
The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-City Composite Home Price Index tracks fluctuations in residential house prices across 20 metropolitan areas in the United States, including Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix, Portland, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Tampa, and Washington D.C.
Macro pages for other countries in America
- 🇦🇷Argentina
- 🇦🇼Aruba
- 🇧🇸Bahamas
- 🇧🇧Barbados
- 🇧🇿Belize
- 🇧🇲Bermuda
- 🇧🇴Bolivia
- 🇧🇷Brazil
- 🇨🇦Canada
- 🇰🇾Cayman Islands
- 🇨🇱Chile
- 🇨🇴Colombia
- 🇨🇷Costa Rica
- 🇨🇺Cuba
- 🇩🇴Dominican Republic
- 🇪🇨Ecuador
- 🇸🇻El Salvador
- 🇬🇹Guatemala
- 🇬🇾Guyana
- 🇭🇹Haiti
- 🇭🇳Honduras
- 🇯🇲Jamaica
- 🇲🇽Mexico
- 🇳🇮Nicaragua
- 🇵🇦Panama
- 🇵🇾Paraguay
- 🇵🇪Peru
- 🇵🇷Puerto Rico
- 🇸🇷Suriname
- 🇹🇹Trinidad and Tobago
- 🇺🇾Uruguay
- 🇻🇪Venezuela
- 🇦🇬Antigua and Barbuda
- 🇩🇲Dominica
- 🇬🇩Grenada
What is Case Shiller Home Price Index Month-over-Month (MoM)?
The Case Shiller Home Price Index (HPI) Month-over-Month (MoM) is an essential indicator in the realm of macroeconomic data, serving as a cornerstone for evaluating housing market trends and broader economic health. At Eulerpool, we recognize the enormous value of understanding and interpreting this index for investors, policymakers, and economic enthusiasts who rely on empirical data to make informed decisions. This detailed overview will elucidate the significance of the Case Shiller Home Price Index MoM, its underlying methodology, historical context, and its implications for various stakeholders. The Case Shiller Home Price Index MoM is most fundamentally a measure of the housing market's evolving dynamics on a monthly basis. Named after economists Karl Case and Robert Shiller, it captures changes in the prices of single-family homes by comparing the sale prices of homes over time. The MoM aspect specifically quantifies the percentage change in home prices from one month to the next, providing a granular look at housing market fluctuations. The methodology behind the Case Shiller HPI is a repeat-sales approach. This method tracks the price changes of the same property over time, eliminating the distortions caused by variations in home quality and condition. By focusing on repeat sales, the index provides a more stable and reliable indicator of housing market trends, unlike median price indexes which might be swayed by the types of homes sold in a given period. In constructing the index, transactions are meticulously verified, ensuring that only arms-length transactions—where buyers and sellers act independently without external influences—are included. This rigor eliminates transactional anomalies that might distort the real picture. Additionally, the index uses a three-month moving average to smooth out short-term volatility, thus providing a clearer trend line. Historically, the Case Shiller HPI has been instrumental in analyzing housing market bubbles and crashes. For instance, in the lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis, the index's rapid escalation in preceding years was a harbinger of the unsustainable lending practices and speculative buying that led to the crash. Similarly, the gradual upward trends post-2008 have been indicative of market recovery and broad economic stabilization. For investors, the Case Shiller Home Price Index MoM offers valuable insights into the potential profitability and risks associated with real estate investments. An increase in the index suggests a rising demand for homes and potentially higher future returns on investment. Conversely, a decline could signify a cooling market, prompting investors to reassess their strategies. Real estate investment trusts (REITs), housing-related stocks, and mortgage-backed securities are intrinsically influenced by these dynamics, making the index a vital tool for those involved in or monitoring the real estate sector. Policymakers also rely heavily on the Case Shiller HPI. By scrutinizing the month-over-month changes, they can gauge the effectiveness of monetary or fiscal policies aimed at stabilizing the economy. For example, a steady increase in the index might suggest that looser monetary policies are fueling housing demand, potentially leading to inflationary pressures. On the other hand, a declining index could prompt more aggressive economic stimulus measures to prevent broader economic downturns. From a broader economic perspective, the Case Shiller HPI MoM is a barometer of consumer confidence and economic health. Housing is a significant component of consumer wealth, and changes in home prices can influence consumer spending and investment behavior. A rising index often correlates with increased consumer wealth, lower mortgage delinquency rates, and higher consumer spending, which can stimulate economic growth. On the flip side, a declining index can signify economic distress, reduced affordability, and potentially higher rates of mortgage defaults. For individual homeowners and potential buyers, the Case Shiller Home Price Index MoM provides a benchmark to compare their local market conditions against the national trend. This knowledge can be critical for making informed decisions about buying, selling, or refinancing their homes. Understanding whether the market is in an upward or downward trend aids homeowners in timing their transactions to maximize benefits. Moreover, the Case Shiller HPI MoM can impact mortgage interest rates. Lenders closely monitor this index to gauge real estate market conditions. Rising home prices often lead to higher interest rates due to increased demand for mortgage funds, while falling prices might prompt lenders to adopt more conservative lending practices. Thus, the index indirectly influences borrowing costs, affecting everyone from first-time homebuyers to seasoned real estate investors. Analyzing regional differences within the Case Shiller HPI can further elaborate the diverse housing market conditions across the United States. The index is not homogeneous; it includes separate indices for various major metropolitan areas, reflecting localized economic conditions. For example, housing market trends in bustling urban centers like New York or San Francisco may differ significantly from those in smaller or more rural areas due to varying economic drivers, demographic trends, and local policies. At Eulerpool, providing real-time updates and comprehensive analysis of the Case Shiller Home Price Index MoM is part of our commitment to delivering actionable economic data. We strive to ensure that our platform equips users with the knowledge and tools required to navigate the complexities of the housing market and the broader economy. By offering in-depth insights into this pivotal index, we aim to enhance users' ability to make well-informed decisions, ultimately contributing to smarter investment strategies and more resilient economic planning. In conclusion, the Case Shiller Home Price Index MoM is an indispensable tool in the suite of macroeconomic indicators. Its detailed and methodologically sound approach provides a clear view of housing market trends, benefiting a wide array of stakeholders, from investors and policymakers to homeowners and financial institutions. At Eulerpool, we remain dedicated to presenting this data accurately and contextually, ensuring our users remain at the forefront of economic understanding and decision-making.