Zindex Reflects Fed’s Cooling Comments
By: Stan Humphries, Chief Economist | May 24, 2006
The potentially cooling U.S. housing market is the subject of intense speculation right now and, last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave official voice to the debate by saying that it was “pretty clear” that the housing market is cooling but predicting a soft landing in light of a strong labor market and rising personal incomes. Bernanke said, “We’re seeing slowing in sales,” and “[t]here also seem to be signs that prices are not rising as quickly as they have been for the past few years.”
Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan also spoke about the housing market on the same day as Bernanke, noting, “Home sales are off, applications are off, everything is going in the same direction. The boom is over, and you can say that with a fairly strong degree of confidence.”
A relative cooling is pretty clear in the national Zindex numbers as well (the Zindex is the median Zestimate across all homes in the country). Throughout most of 2005, the monthly change in the national Zindex increased from about 1.5% to above 3%. Starting in the fall-winter of 2005, however, the monthly Zindex change began declining, a sign of slowing housing appreciation. Currently, at the national level, housing appreciation is essentially flat as measured by the Zindex. While flat may not be good news for many homeowners, it is, at least, stable and not showing strong, consistent signs of declining.
- Stumble it!
- Categories: Real Estate Industry, Zillow
Comments
2 Comments so far
Enjoy this post? Subscribe to the Zillow Blog feed or get updates via e-mail





Matt Borthwick on May 24, 2006 8:17 pm
Is there a way to see error bars on the various Zindexes?
It would then be obvious when a local Zindex (e.g. state or ZIP) shows statistically significant differences from the national Zindex.
Or are the sample sizes large enough that even a one-pixel disparity is outside 3-sigma?
NIkki on May 29, 2006 6:35 am
So, if th “boom” part of the boom-sust cycle is over, wht does that leave us with…Oh, wait, if I’m talking to the NAR, it’s a new permanently high plateau. Gee, where have I heard all this before?