- Global stocks mostly fall before US jobs data
- Ubisoft: the 'Assassin's Creed' maker targeted by suitors
- Stock markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Pakistan flight departs for Paris after EU ban lifted
- Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to visit native Pakistan for girls' summit
- AI comes down from the cloud as chips get smarter
- Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
- Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
- Last 2 years crossed 1.5C global warming limit: EU monitor
- Japan 'poop master' gives back to nature
- US Supreme Court to hear TikTok ban case
- US Fed's December rate cut should be its last for now: official
- Paris Hilton among celebrities to lose homes in LA fires
- Airbus boosts plane deliveries in 2024
- Ubisoft reviews restructuring options, postpones new Assassin's Creed
- Lamborghini sets new sales record amidst hybrid push
- Lebanon army chief Aoun becomes president after two-year vacancy
- US emissions stagnated in 2024, challenging climate goals: study
- Lebanon army chief short of required majority in first round of president vote
- Global stock markets mixed tracking US rates outlook
- Lebanon meets to finally elect president after two-year vacancy
- Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires, lose houses as Hollywood events scrapped
- Japan startup hopeful ahead of second moon launch
- Ukraine allies to hold last defence meet before Trump takes office
- Myanmar military adopts anti-junta fighters' drone tactics
- CES tech looks to help world's aging population
- Rubber tappers forge sustainable future in Amazon
- US astronauts upbeat seven months into eight-day mission
- Extreme weather, suburban sprawl fuel LA's wildfires
- Political chess or true beliefs? Zuckerberg's surprise Trump pivot
- US Fed officials concerned over 'stalled' disinflation, tariffs: minutes
- Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires as Hollywood events scrapped
- Several US Fed officials concerned over 'stalled' disinflation: minutes
- US tech titans ramp up pressure on EU
- 'Wicked' tops SAG Awards nominations
- Safe from looting, Damascus museum reopens a month after Assad's fall
- Award-winning migrant actor earns visa to stay in France -- as a mechanic
- Celebrities forced to flee Los Angeles blazes
- US tariff and inflation fears rattle global markets
- US private sector hiring undershoots expectations: ADP
- US tariffs unlikely to have 'significant' inflation impact: Fed official
- Lebanon leaders in talks for new bid to elect president
- Antarctic sea ice rebounds from record lows: US scientists
- Can EU stand up to belligerent Big Tech in new Trump era?
- US, Canadian and Australian travellers now face UK entry fee
- Indonesia upholds iPhone 16 sales ban after Apple offers $1 bn investment
- UK's Catherine turns 43 hoping for better year
- OpenAI chief Sam Altman denies sister's sexual abuse accusations
- Germans turn to balcony solar panels to save money
- Samsung warns fourth-quarter profit to miss forecasts
US home prices saw biggest jump in 34 years in 2021
US home prices in 2021 saw their biggest increase in at least 34 years, according to data released Tuesday, as buyers spent the year snapping up homes and builders struggled to keep up.
Home prices surged 18.8 percent last year, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller US National Home Price index, the biggest jump in its existence and much more than the 10.4 percent jump seen in 2020.
The US real estate market last year saw the most existing homes sold in 15 years, with sales topping six million even as supply sunk to an all-time low by the close of the year.
Builders have had to deal with double-digit increases in material costs as well as a shortage of workers.
That pushed home prices higher, and played a role in consumer prices experiencing their largest jump in decades.
The inflation wave is expected to ease this year as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates and global supply chain snarls ease, and Craig J. Lazzara, Managing Director at S&P Dow Jones Indices, predicted higher lending rates may also cool the housing market.
"In the short term... we should soon begin to see the impact of increasing mortgage rates on home prices," he said.
The home price increases were most severe in Phoenix, where they rose 32.5 percent. In Tampa, the jump was 29.4 percent, and in Miami 27.3 percent.
Lazzara said jump in prices compared to 2020 appeared to be moderating near the end of the year, but in December, they ticked upwards again.
As for the causes of the house-buying boom, "We have previously suggested that the strength in the US housing market is being driven in part by a change in locational preferences as households react to the Covid pandemic," he said.
"More data will be required to understand whether this demand surge simply represents an acceleration of purchases that would have occurred over the next several years rather than a more permanent secular change."
Ng.A.Adebayo--CPN