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TH E M R EP O RT | 15 MDWELL Home-Price Pop These 5 markets experienced the greatest year-over-year increase in home prices. A hot housing topic on every- one's minds is affordability. According to a recent First American Real Home Price Index (RHPI), rising wages are providing some relief to the higher mortgage rates impacting the market. The RHPI measures the price changes of single-family properties throughout the U.S. adjusted for the impact of income and interest-rate changes on consumer house-buying power over time at the national, state, and metropolitan levels. The data found that prices increased 11.3 percent from August 2017 to August 2018. On the other hand, a consumer's hous- ing buying power (calculated as how much one can buy based on changes in income and interest rates) decreased 4.7 percent on a year-over-year basis. "When incomes rise, consumer house-buying power increases. When mortgage rates or nominal house prices rise, consumer house- buying power declines," said Mark Fleming, Chief Economist at First American when explaining the dynamics that influence consumer home-buying power. "Since August 2017, two of the key factors in affordability have risen—mortgage rates increased 67-basis points, and unadjusted house prices rose by 6 percent. However, household income growth helps affordability, and household incomes increased by 3.2 percent in August," Fleming said. Additionally, he said that wage growth had contributed $11,000 to consumer home-buying power, thus helping mitigate the influ- ences of rising mortgage rates and unadjusted house prices on affordability. "Mortgage rates are rising because the economy is growing, the labor market is tightening, and wage growth is increas- ing. Wage growth translates into rising household incomes, which were 3.2 percent higher in August compared to a year ago," Fleming said. "That growth in household income contributed $11,000 to consumer house-buying power, which helped mitigate the negative effects of rising mortgage rates. While rising mortgage rates reduced house-buying power by $30,000 over the last year, rising incomes increased consumer house-buying power by $11,000. The net effect? Overall con- sumer house-buying power fell by $19,000 in August compared with a year ago." The 5 States with the Greatest YOY Increase in RHPI 22.3 % Nevada 22 % New Jersey 19.8 % Michigan 19.7% Ohio 18.1% Alaska Source: First American Real Home Price Index "Mortgage rates are rising because the economy is growing, the labor market is tightening, and wage growth is increasing. Wage growth translates into rising household incomes, which were 3.2 percent higher in August compared to a year ago." — Mark Fleming, Chief Economist, First American