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Home Price Appreciation Hits 52-Month Streak

The Black Knight Home Price Index (HPI), utilizing repeat sales data from the nation’s largest public records data set, as well as its market-leading, loan-level mortgage performance data, found that U.S. home prices are up 0.3 percent for August 2016 as well as up 5.3 percent year-over-year. At $266,000, the U.S. HPI has risen over 33 percent from the market’s bottom and is now within just 0.7 percent of a new national peak.

Specifically, New York led home price gains among the states, seeing 1.1 percent growth for the month. In contrast nine states saw home prices decline including South Carolina, North Dakota, Virginia, Connecticut, and Missouri. All of the states were down 0.3 percent from July.

Additionally, home prices in nine of the nation’s 20 largest states and nine of the 40 largest metros hit new peaks in August.

The report also states that New York, New York led metro-area growth at 1.2 percent appreciation. In contrast, New York state metro areas reportedly accounted for nine of the top 10 biggest monthly movers.

St. Louis home prices continued to decline on both monthly and annual levels making it the only metro among the 20 largest to do so. Meanwhile, prices in Kansas City, Missouri hit a new peak for the 8th consecutive month.

The report states that each month the Black Knight HPI reports five price levels (quintiles), along with REO discount rates, for 18,000+ U.S. ZIP codes. Findings are available with or without seasonal adjustments, although all numbers that follow have not been seasonally adjusted.

Non-disclosure states do not include property sales price information as part of their publicly available county recorder data. Black Knight is able to obtain the sales price information for these states by combining and matching records across its unique data assets.

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