South
Florida home buyers waiting for a price dip, don’t hold your breath. According
to the latest report from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices, home
prices in the region continued their years-long upward climb in October.
The
index, which tracks home sales in major metropolitan areas throughout the
United States, stated the cost of South Florida’s single-family homes jumped by
6.5 percent in October when compared to the same month in 2015.
That
means South Florida saw the fifth-highest percentage growth in the country,
with Seattle taking the top spot at 10.7 percent, followed by Portland with
10.3 percent, Denver at 8.3 percent and Dallas with 8.1 percent.
Nationwide,
prices in the U.S. housing market hit an all-time high in October after spiking
5.6 percent year over year, breaking a record set
just one month prior, according to the report.
Recently
released November data from the Miami Association of Realtors shows the price
of a single-family home in Miami has risen uninterrupted for the past 60
months, even as reports
of a market slowdown have proliferated.
The
steady rise appears to be fueled by a boom in mid-priced home sales over the
past few months. South Florida’s shrinking cache of distressed properties,
which typically carry a lower price tag than the market, has also helped buoy
housing costs in the region. — Sean Stewart-Muniz
Original Content The Real Deal

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