S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index - Composite 10 (CSXR)

QUOTE AND NEWS
Credit Writedowns  Jul 2 
When we saw the Case-Shiller data for April on Tuesday, I noted that New York was the most overpriced metro area in the Composite-20 as prices there were still 70% above January 2000 levels.  This is changing fast.  Bloomberg reports: ...
The Mess That Greenspan Made  Jul 2 
David Rosenberg at Gluskin-Sheff comments on Tuesday's cheery 0.6 percent monthly decline in the 20-city Case-Shiller Home Price Index (CS-HPI). Even Robert Shiller himself seemed excited about the fact that his own home price index was down just...
Clusterstock  Jul 2 
The Case-Shiller numbers indicated that things are getting worse and worse for the New York region real estate market, and now we have Q2 data for Manhattan specifically, and it's ugly. According to the  2Q 2009 Prudential Douglas Elliman...
Contrarian Profits  Jul 1 
In the currency market, the dollar was higher against the euro. Late Tuesday, the euro was trading at $1.4032 vs. $1.4078 on Monday. The dollar posted its modest gain on not much, as the data of the day was decidedly mixed. First, the...
Healdsburg Housing Bubble  Jul 1 
The Case-Shiller numbers are out and for the first time in quite a while there was an uptick in the monthly data for the San Francisco data. On our chart, the value of our $600,000 home jumped from $323,588 in March to $325,484 in April. The...
Clusterstock  Jul 1 
We noted earlier that real-estate in the northeast--and in New York City especially--hasn't fared nearly as badly as many other places in the country.  Specifically, NYC real estate is now down 21% from the peak, according to the April Case...
Clusterstock  Jul 1 
Think the housing market is bad in New York City? It is! But it could be a lot worse. Going back to 2006, we still haven't matched the decline for the rest of the country, according to the Case Shiller 20 City Composite. And pray we don't end up...
InvestorCentric  Jul 1 
The latest from the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes shows that price declines are slowing down with some metropolitan areas showing slight growth in property values in April. See the following post from The Mess That Greenspan Made for more...
Bloomberg  Jun 30 
(Update2) Home prices saw a “striking improvement in the rate of decline” in April and trading in funds launched today indicates investors believe the U.S. housing slump is nearing a bottom, said Yale University economist Robert Shiller.
New York Times  Jun 30 
Prices continued to fall in April amid rising unemployment and new foreclosures. But the pace of declines leveled off slightly, according to the Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller index.
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The Case-Shiller Home Price Indices are a benchmark of residential real-estate prices in the U.S. The indices track prices of single-family homes in different geographical areas.

The most-widely cited index among these is the S&P 20 Metropolitan Index (MSA) which is a composite index of 20 cities in the U.S. and is published on the last Tuesday of every month. S&P also publishes a wider National Home Price Index every quarter.

The S&P 20 MSA index was started in January 2000 with a value of 100. It reached its historic high in July 2006 with a value of 206.52. The index had fallen to 164.57 in August 2008 due to the subprime crisis in the U.S.

The indices are calculated by Fiserv Inc. and are distributed by a partnership with Standard & Poor's.

[edit] Index Calulation

The indices are calculated using the repeat sales method developed by Robert Shiller and Karl Case. It takes into account only houses which have been sold at least twice. The idea is to capture the change in value of houses of the same quality.

The monthly indices are normalized using a 3-month moving average. For example, the July 2007 index point is based on data for May, June and July of 2007. This is used to account for delays in sales-price data reporting and to get a larger sample size.[1]

The 20 MSA index is based on data from:

  • Atlanta
  • Charlotte
  • Cleveland
  • Dallas
  • Detroit
  • Minneapolis
  • Phoenix
  • Seattle
  • Tampa
  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • Denver
  • Las Vegas
  • Portland (Oregon)
  • Los Angeles
  • Miami
  • New York
  • San Diego
  • San Francisco
  • Washington DC

[edit] Investing in the Case-Shiller Indices

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange offers futures contracts on the Case-Shiller Indices. An investor can invest in a local index as well as the Composite Index. Each contract represents $250 times the value of the respective housing index. For example: If the New York index is at 150, each contract will have a value of $37,500.[2]

[edit] References

  1. Standard and Poor's, Case-Shiller FAQ, Retrieved November 4, 2008
  2. CME, Housing Price Futures, Retrieved November 4, 2008
 
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