Home-sale prices have slumped 10% in San Francisco over the past year, Redfin says. But it’s not the only city where real-estate values are falling.

The median sale price of a house in the U.S. is $350,250, Redfin says

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Sellers now appear to be setting their listing prices less ambitiously, if they’re listing at all, in response to waning buyer demand — even in San Francisco.

Even as mortgage rates come off of recent highs, buyer demand remains constrained. And that’s affecting listing and asking-price decisions among sellers, according to a new report.

The report by Redfin RDFN, 0.49%, which tracked home-sale prices for the four weeks ending Jan. 15, found that the median price of a house sold in the U.S. was up 0.9% from a year ago, at $350,250.

While home prices on a national level hold steady, property markets in some parts of the country are showing weakness.

Prices of homes sold fell on a year-over-year basis in 18 of the 50 most populous metro areas in the U.S., with San Francisco leading the way. In San Francisco, selling prices were down 10.1% from a year earlier, Redfin said.

That sale-price decline was followed by that of nearby San Jose, Calif., where prices fell by 6.7%. Austin, Texas, saw home-sale prices drop by 5.5%, and Detroit by 4.3%.

Phoenix, a boomtown earlier in the pandemic, saw home-sale prices fall by 3.7%.

The median asking price of newly listed homes in the 50 top U.S. metropolitan areas was $357,200, up 3.9% year over year, the biggest increase in two months, though the median listing price verged on $400,000 last spring.

A drop in mortgage rates has prompted some buyers to rush into the market. The rate on a typical 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell to 6.15%, Freddie Mac said on Thursday.

Mortgage demand has surged 28%. The Redfin report identified a 25% rise in mortgage applications over the week ending Jan. 13.

But mortgage payments are still high compared with a year ago. The monthly payment for a median-priced home is $2,262, Redfin said. Monthly mortgage payments are up 30% from a year ago.

Source: www.marketwatch.com