Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • yesterday
Nearly one-third of the 100 largest cities in the U.S. saw annual price declines in June.
Transcript
00:00The once red-hot housing market is showing signs of cooling off.
00:04Annual home price growth in June slowed to just 1.3 percent,
00:08down from 1.6 percent in May and the slowest rate in two years.
00:13That's according to mortgage technology firm ICE.
00:1527, or nearly a third of the 100 largest U.S. cities,
00:19saw annual price declines last month,
00:22a level of weakness not seen since the early days of the Fed's rate hikes back in 2022.
00:27The main culprit? Mortgage rates.
00:30Still hovering in the high 6 percent range, keeping buyers on the sidelines.
00:34And with more homes hitting the market, especially in the south and west,
00:38some of that upward pressure on prices is starting to eat.
00:41But not everywhere.
00:43Prices are still climbing sharply in the northeast and midwest.
00:46Rochester, New York, led all major markets in early June,
00:49with prices up 8.1 percent from a year ago,
00:53followed by Hartford and Bridgeport, Connecticut, where prices rose more than 7 percent.
00:57That'll do it for your daily briefing from the New York Stock Exchange.
01:01I'm Caroline Woods with The Street.

Recommended