Housing Prices Down for the Eighth Consecutive Month

According to the S&P/Case-Shiller index released Tuesday, U.S. home prices fell nationwide in August for the eighth consecutive month.

Published on October 30, 2007

"There is really no positive news in today's report," said Mr. Robert Shiller, chief economist for MacroMarkets LLC which collaborated with S&P on the indicator.

Home prices as measured by the index have fallen by more every month since the beginning of the year. August is the 21st month of decelerating returns.

An index of 10 U.S. cities fell 5% in August from a year ago. That was the biggest drop since June 1991. The lowest ever was a decline of 6.3% in April 1991.

A broader index of 20 cities fell 4.4% in August over last year, with 15 of 20 cities reporting that prices fell.
Housing prices have been a key worry for consumers, and the effect of the slowdown alongside the summer's steep decline in credit availability, has many worried that the economy will go into recession.

Many economists expect the Federal Reserve will cut rates again at the end of a two-day meeting that starts Tuesday, after a bigger-than-expected half-point cut last month.