Twin Cities-area home prices posted their largest monthly gain in more than a decade in July, up 4.6 percent from June, according to a closely watched gauge of the housing market. That's the largest month-to-month increase of the 20 metropolitan areas monitored by the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller national home price index.
Tuesday marked the third consecutive monthly gain in the index of Twin Cities-area home prices, and it follows a string of generally improving news about the state of the housing industry and the outlook for the economy. Consumer confidence is closely tied to home prices, and the steep plunge in home values has left homeowners reluctant to spend money at the shopping mall or downtown restaurants.
Of course, the good news is somewhat relative. Prices are still down significantly from a year ago, and home prices in the Twin Cities remain about 30 percent below their peak in September 2006, according to Case-Shiller data.
And real estate watchers say the big gain locally is likely the market self-correcting from big monthly drops earlier this year, when a large number of the homes sold were in various states of foreclosure. A big, looming question is how the market will fare when a tax credit for first-time home buyers expires at the end of November.
David Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor's, said the Twin Cities area's comparatively large increase could be explained as "rebounding from a number that had been unusually soft." Local prices fell 6.1 percent in March, the largest monthly decline of any metro area since the benchmark started two decades ago. July prices are down 17.3 percent in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area compared with a year ago, while the 20-city average is down 13.3 percent.
Only prices in Sun Belt cities such as Las Vegas, Miami, Phoenix and Tampa as well as San Francisco and hard-hit Detroit saw declines steeper than in Minnesota over the past year.
But many economists are focusing more on the short term, looking at monthly gains. The 20-metro-area index rose 1.6 percent in July. Just two cities -- Las Vegas and Seattle -- posted declines in July, and 13 of the cities have posted three months of gains.
"The general trend is clearly positive, not just in Minneapolis, but in almost all the cities we look at," Blitzer said. He attributes this to "general improvement that we've seen in the economy and with it some improvement in the overall confidence and people's attitudes."