Real estate prices in the Case-Shiller 10-city index have dropped 30% from the peak in 2005. Declines this steep have not been seen since the great depression. Mortgage rates have also declined and this along with current prices are a great combination for buyers.
According to expert studies, there has not been better deals with mortgage/pricing since the early 90s. If you buy an average home today, and take out a 30-year mortgage at 5%, the annual bill for interest and repayment of principal will come to about 19 times typical weekly earnings (If you get the $8,000 refundable tax credit too, it drops below 18 times). As you can see from the bottom chart, we haven’t seen it that low since the early 1970s. In his article Latest Home Price Data Is Good News for Buyers, Brett Arends states that, “The Case-Shiller 10-city data go back to 1987. I ran the numbers comparing the index values, mortgage rates and average weekly earnings. Net conclusion: On average–an important point I’ll return to shortly–buying a home now is as cheap as it was in the mid-1990s, when houses were an absolute steal. No, the Case-Shiller data aren’t perfect. The biggest complaint is that they are weighted too much towards the coasts and the big “bubble” cities like Miami, Las Vegas and Phoenix. So I decided to run the same analyses–average prices, mortgage rates and weekly earnings–for the home price data tracked by the U.S. Census. Those numbers go back further than Case-Shiller, to 1972. “ The charts below represent Arend’s study:

