Category Archives: Pound Ridge

Credit Conditions Continue to be Tight South Salem Real Estate

Each month, the National Association of REALTORS® obtains up-to-date and on-the-ground incisive comments from REALTORS® who participate in the REALTORS® Confidence Index (RCI) survey. The RCI survey tracks expectations about overall market conditions, buyer/seller traffic, price, buyer profiles, and issues affecting real estate.

The selected comments reflect the general sentiment expressed by REALTORS® who participated in the October 2012, conducted during October 22 through November 5, 2012. All real estate is local and conditions in specific markets may vary from the national trend.

Tight Financing/Credit
REALTORS® reported that access to financing remains tight, so cash buyers, who are typically investors, are winning the bids against first-time homebuyers. There are reports that banks are asking for higher credit scores, with a report of a bank rejecting a score of as high as 800. It also appears that self-employment can be a problem in obtaining a mortgage. The mortgage application process continues to be deemed as too drawn out to the point of thwarting or jeopardizing the sale. There is also lack of assistance for helping current homeowners who are slightly delinquent to modify keep their homes.

  • “Banks are ignoring settlement dates and can’t even give you a reason for a delay. There is no accountability on their end of the transaction. Three settlements in October were delayed due to lender issues.”
  • “1st time buyers finding it difficult to qualify for loans”
  • “I had two buyers with over 800 credit score and the bank would not loan. They ended up paying cash and looking for a loan after the closing.”
  • “The lack of assistance from the mortgage companies for helping current home owners modifying their loan due to being underwater or slight delinquency to help them stay in their homes!!!!”
  • “Cash buyers are winning bids. FHA buyers hardly have a chance.”
  • “Concerned about purchases by investor groups – hundreds of homes purchased from Fannie/Freddie – basically no information forthcoming regarding this – concerned about what effect this will have long term in our area – are we going to have no “real” home owners for years to come? Not a good plan – list with realtors, to be purchased by home owner.”

Jed Smith, Managing Director, Quantitative Research

Jed Smith is Managing Director, Quantitative Research with the National Association of Realtors®. He has worked on real estate issues for the past 20 years, providing input on a variety of housing, commercial real estate, tax, and planning issues. Recently he has been involved in several international studies.

Real Estate Market Trends: Pending Home Sales Rise | Pound Ridge Realtor

Pending home sales – a predictor of signed housing contracts – rose 5.2 percent in October, according to the latest real estate market trends reported today by the National Association of Realtors.

The association’s Pending Home Sales Index has realized 18 consecutive months of annual gains, reaching a reading of 104.8 in October, the highest level since March 2007, excluding a few spikes stimulated by the first-time home buyers’ tax credit, said the Chicago-based trade association.

“We’ve had very good housing affordability conditions for quite some time, but we’re seeing more impact now from steady job creation, and rising consumer confidence about home buying now that home prices have clearly turned positive,” Lawrence Yun, the association’s chief economist, said in a statement.

Home prices rose more than 11 percent in October 2012, compared to October 2011, according to the association. The gains have raised total home equity by $760 billion since the beginning of the year, according to Yun, a figure that could reach $1 trillion by year end.

The Pending Home Sales Index tracks home purchase contracts that have been signed, but not completed. A sale is typically finalized within 60 months of signing. The index reveals regional real estate market trends, according to Yun. “Contract activity surged in the Midwest and is showing very healthy gains in the South, but was down slightly in both the Northeast and West.”

In other real estate market trends, the Commerce Department yesterday reported a 0.3 percent dip in sales of new single family homes for October of 2012. Despite the drop, the seasonally adjusted annual rate of 368,000 home sales for October is 17.2 percent higher than the 314,000 rate for October 2011. Inventories stand at 147,000, a 4.8-month supply at the current sales rate.

“The latest numbers are right in line with our forecast, which projects that sales will resume a slow, upward trajectory going forward and will end 2012 about 20 percent ahead of 2011,” said David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, a Washington, DC, trade association that tracks real estate market trends.

The value of conversation | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate

I don’t think conversation gets the respect it deserves.  Consider these facts:

I love my wife.  After a little more than half our lives together I can confidently say that she is the most important and influential person I have ever known.  She is half my life, literally, as the direct result of conversation.  It’s how we fell in love and how we stay that way.

I love my children.  They’ve taught me, tested me and have been the fuel propelling me towards my better self.  I stagger daily, but will never stop striving to be worthy of guiding them and preparing them for happy lives.  Conversation is where the work of parenting gets done.  It’s the countless explanations to my three year old and the countless excuses from my teenagers.

I am profoundly grateful for my business partners.  Together we are so much stronger, better, faster and fun than we could ever be apart.  Conversation is the glue, the playground and key to the magic factory that lets this happen.  It is the stone against which we sharpen our ideas and the salve that remedies our failures.

I believe that the quality of our lives is determined by the quality of our conversations.  So let’s be good at this.  Here are my ground rules: 

  • Ask questions.  There’s no better way to start a conversation.  “Have you lived here long?”  “Did you hear about (blank)?”  “I love your (blank), where did you get it?” are some of my favorites.  They are guaranteed to get a reply, but then you need to keep the conversation going.  How?
  • Be interested first.  Great conversation is a dance.  It’s give and take, and wit, and repartee… but listening is critical.  Instead of waiting for them to stop yapping so you can pivot to your story, try asking follow up questions instead.  Like this- “Interesting.  I’ve wondered about that, what is it you like most about (blank)?”
  • Ask for opinions.  This stops questions from feeling like an inquisition and it invites fresh thinking.  The question “What’s your opinion?” and statement “In my opinion” both leave room for discussion.  It communicates that you’re interested in what they think – and that’s so much more important than how tall, short, fat, rich or pretty we are.  When we ask someone what they think, they immediately give us a free upgrade in their good peeps ranking.
  • Make friends.  If this is your goal you will almost never fail.  Meet strangers with an open and accepting heart, and you’ll suddenly find new friends everywhere you go.

 

And now, a word of caution from my pal William Shakespeare: the tip of the tongue reveals the depth of the mind.

I used to think he was simply referring to intelligence, but he’s really talking about the transparency of our motivations as revealed by what climbs out of our word holes.   So be cautious and resist the temptation to ‘always be closing’.  Yes, you need sales, but don’t rush it.  If you cultivate, nurture and build relationships; sales will follow.

So here’s the simple recipe for increasing opportunity: be more interested.

If you want more opportunity, be interested in more people.  It’s just that simple.  Stay in touch with them.  Start conversations and give them a reason to keep you top-of-mind besides what you do for a living.

If you do this, I promise the rewards will be surprising.  You’ll have more fun, make more friends and realize that you don’t need to talk about what you do to do more of it.

4 steps to goal setting 2013: Uncover your best year yet! | South Salem Real Estate

We love tools! We love technology! The best business strategies are inspired by both of these. But, implementing and applying new goals can sometimes be lost in the fast-moving pace of bright and shiny, and we can lose focus. As the old Robert Burns quote says “The best laid plans of mice and men go awry.”

So, for Week 3, of 10 Weeks and 10 Strategies, we will be using a classic business tool that provides 4 steps to quickly assessing where you should be setting your NEW goals of 2013. This will involve some critical thinking skills, so if you aren’t up for the challenge, you might want to move on.

Tips: Print the downloadable PDF to work on, or use this as a whiteboard brainstorming session:) This is meant to be a quick tool, don’t over analyze! 

The S.W.O.T. Analysis: Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats in your real estate business


The basics: In business we all have strengths and weaknesses, these are internal to your business. We also have threats and opportunities; these are the external factors. When you step back to answer what these are, you can uncover some amazing things about you and your business, that can help you prioritize and focus your efforts on the areas that will provide the most ROI for you, and your business. For example; should all your focus be on social media? What is having a bigger pay off; online activities or offline?

Build on what you do well; learn from what you don’t

Strengths:

  • What do you do better than your competition? (social media presence? better video marketing?)
  • What do your colleagues, team members, clients see as your strengths? (knowledge of the market? tech-savvy? great at using the phone?)
  • What is your best personal strength?
  • What factors help you get the listing, sell the home, or close the deal?

Weaknesses:

  • What could you improve?
  • What service could you add to stand out in your market? Be a paperless agent?
  • What should you delegate to someone else?
  • What should you avoid doing?
  • Is there something your competitors are doing better?

Is there a better way?

Opportunities:

  • Is there a trend with your buyers and sellers that you can act on? Lifestyle changes? Use of social media? Reviews and feedback websites?
  • Is there an area that you stand out in in your market that you can really become the expert in?
  • Is there an untapped resource you can utilize more? (relationships with local businesses? New networking possibilities?)

Be proactive, not reactive

Threats:

  • Is technology threatening your market position?
  • Are there more tech-savvy agents accomplishing more in year?
  • What are your obstacles to achieving your goals?
  • What is happening in the real estate industry? Nationally? Regionally?
  • How do these threats affect your strengths and opportunities?
It’s time to set some goals. Prioritize your goals based on what you’ve learned, and add them to your weekly, monthly and yearly goals. Set some milestones to have each goal implemented and break them down into implementable steps. You’ll have some built-up excitement and momentum going into 2013, and some awesome clarity! One app I love for finding new exercises for business strategizing is Mindtools.com

I’d love your thoughts and to know one goal you are implementing next year, leave us a comment! Did you miss Week 1 or Week 2? << There ya go! Until next week!

Case-Shiller Makes it Official: “We are Now in the Midst of a Recovery” | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate

Two of the nation’s most authoritative national housing price indices today reported significant third quarter price increases over last year at this time, and the chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices confirmed that a housing recover is underway.

The S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index recorded a 3.6 percent gain in the third quarter of 2012 over the third quarter of 2011, marking the sixth consecutive month of increasing prices. In September 2012, the 10- and 20-City Composites posted annual increases of 2.1percent and 3.0 percent, respectively.

Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) seasonally adjusted purchase-only house price index reported today that deasonally adjusted house prices rose 4.0 percent from the third quarter of 2011 to the third quarter of 2012. FHFA’s seasonally adjusted monthly index for September was up 0.2 percent from August.prices and rose 1.1 percent from the second quarter to the third quarter of 2012.

With significant growth in home prices during the quarter and a modest inventory of homes available for sale, house price movements in the third quarter were similar to what we observed in the spring,” said FHFA Principal Economist Andrew Leventis. “The past year has seen consistent price increases, but a number of factors continue to affect the recovery in home prices such as stagnant income growth, high unemployment levels, lingering uncertainty about the macroeconomy, and the large number of homes in the foreclosure pipeline.”

FHFA’s expanded-data house price index, a metric introduced in August 2011 that adds transactions information from county recorder offices and the Federal Housing Administration to the HPI data sample, rose 1.0 percent over the latest quarter. Over the latest four quarters,the index is up 3.3 percent. For individual states, price changes reflected in the expanded-datameasure and the traditional purchase-only HPI are compared on pages 21-23 of this report.

Average home prices in the S&P/Case-Shiller 10- and 20-City Composites were each up by 0.3 percent in September versus August 2012. Seventeen of the 20 MSAs and both Composites posted better annual returns in September versus August 2012; Detroit and Washington D.C. recorded a slight deceleration in their annual rates, and New York saw no change.

The 10- and 20-City Case-Shiller Composites have posted positive annual returns for four consecutive months with a 2.1 percent and 3.0 percent annual change in September, respectively. Month-over-month, both Composites have recorded increases for six consecutive months, with the most recent monthly gain being 0.3 percent for each Composite.

“In September’s report all three headline composites and 17 of the 20 cities gained over their levels of a year ago. Month-over-month, 13 cities and both Composites posted positive monthly gains. says David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

“We are entering the seasonally weak part of the year.  The headline figures, which are not seasonally adjusted, showed five cities with lower prices in September versus only one in August; in the seasonally adjusted data the pattern was reversed: one city fell in September versus two in August. Despite the seasons, housing continues to improve.

Blitzer said Phoenix continues to lead the recovery with a 20.4 percent annual growth rate. Atlanta has finally reversed 26 months of annual declines with a 0.1 percent annual rate as observed in September’s housing data. At the other end of the spectrum, Chicago and New York were the only two cities to post annual declines of 1.5 percent and 2.3 percent respectively and were also down 0.6 percent and 0.1 percent month-over-month.

“Thirteen of the 20 cities recorded positive monthly returns; Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland and New York saw modest drops in home prices in September as compared to August; Tampa and Washington D.C. were flat. With six months of consistently rising home prices, it is safe to say that we are now in the midst of a recovery in the housing market.”

As of the third quarter of 2012, average home prices across the United States are back at their mid-2003 levels.  At the end of the third quarter of 2012, the National Index was up 2.2 percent over the second quarter of 2012 and 3.6% above the third quarter of 2011.

As of September 2012, average home prices across the United States for the 10-City and 20-City Composites are back to their autumn 2003 levels. Measured from their June/July 2006 peaks, the decline for both Composites is approximately 29 percent through September 2012. For both Composites, the September 2012 levels are approximately 9 percent above their recent lows seen in March 2012.

In September 2012, 13 MSAs and both Composites posted positive monthly gains. Home prices in Tampa and Washington DC saw no change from August to September. Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland and New York saw a slight drop in prices in September. Phoenix recorded the highest increase in annual rate, up 20.4% from its September 2011 level. Chicago and New York were the only two cities that fared worse year-over-year with respective annual rates of -1.5% and -2.3 percent.

The table below summarizes the results for September 2012.

2012 Q32012 Q3/2012 Q22012 Q2/2012 Q1
LevelChange (%)Change (%)1-Year Change (%)
U.S. National Index135.672.2%7.1%3.6%
September 2012September/AugustAugust/July
Metropolitan AreaLevelChange (%)Change (%)1-Year Change (%)
Atlanta96.060.3%1.8%0.1%
Boston157.26-0.6%0.7%1.9%
Charlotte116.28-0.3%0.6%3.5%
Chicago116.69-0.6%0.7%-1.5%
Cleveland102.10-0.9%1.0%1.4%
Dallas121.570.2%0.1%4.4%
Denver134.010.4%0.5%6.7%
Detroit79.820.7%2.1%7.6%
Las Vegas97.381.4%1.6%3.8%
Los Angeles174.801.0%1.3%4.0%
Miami150.240.1%1.0%7.4%
Minneapolis126.021.1%1.2%8.8%
New York166.10-0.1%0.6%-2.3%
Phoenix120.651.1%1.8%20.4%
Portland141.100.2%0.5%3.7%
San Diego160.091.4%0.9%4.1%
San Francisco143.150.5%0.5%7.5%
Seattle142.090.3%-0.1%4.8%
Tampa134.900.0%0.4%5.9%
Washington192.360.0%0.5%3.2%
Composite-10158.930.3%0.8%2.1%
Composite-20146.220.3%0.8%3.0%
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and Fiserv
Data through September 2012

Since its launch in early 2006, the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices have published, and the markets have followed and reported on, the non-seasonally adjusted data set used in the headline indices. For analytical purposes, S&P Dow Jones Indices publishes a seasonally adjusted data set covered in the headline indices, as well as for the 17 of 20 markets with tiered price indices and the five condo markets that are tracked.

A summary of the monthly changes using the seasonally adjusted (SA) and non-seasonally adjusted (NSA) data can be found in the table below.

2012 Q3/2012 Q22012 Q2/2012 Q1
NSASANSASA
US National2.2%1.1%7.1%2.4%
September/August Change (%)August/July Change (%)
Metropolitan AreaNSASANSASA
Atlanta0.3%1.7%1.8%1.7%
Boston-0.6%0.1%0.7%0.5%
Charlotte-0.3%0.4%0.6%0.4%
Chicago-0.6%-0.7%0.7%-0.1%
Cleveland-0.9%0.6%1.0%0.3%
Dallas0.2%1.0%0.1%0.2%
Denver0.4%1.0%0.5%0.2%
Detroit0.7%0.4%2.1%0.5%
Las Vegas1.4%1.1%1.6%0.8%
Los Angeles1.0%0.8%1.3%1.0%
Miami0.1%0.3%1.0%0.4%
Minneapolis1.1%1.0%1.2%0.4%
New York-0.1%0.3%0.6%0.0%
Phoenix1.1%1.3%1.8%1.4%
Portland0.2%0.7%0.5%0.4%
San Diego1.4%1.7%0.9%0.7%
San Francisco0.5%1.0%0.5%0.1%
Seattle0.3%0.5%-0.1%-0.2%
Tampa0.0%0.0%0.4%0.2%
Washington0.0%0.1%0.5%0.0%
Composite-100.3%0.3%0.8%0.3%
Composite-200.3%0.4%0.8%0.4%
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and Fiserv
Data through September 2012

Pound Ridge sales up 12% – Prices down 17% | RobReportBlog | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate Report

Pound Ridge NY sales up 12% – Prices down 17%  |  RobReportBlog

Pound Ridge Real Estate Report  –  past six months

2012

36             homes sold

$675,000   median sold price

$355,000    low price

$2,875,500  high price

3230          ave. size

$269          ave price per foot

184            ave. DOM

92.82         ave sold to ask

$885,537  average sold price

Case-Shiller Makes it Official: “We are Now in the Midst of a Recovery” | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate

Two of the nation’s most authoritative national housing price indices today reported significant third quarter price increases over last year at this time, and the chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices confirmed that a housing recover is underway.

The S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index recorded a 3.6 percent gain in the third quarter of 2012 over the third quarter of 2011, marking the sixth consecutive month of increasing prices. In September 2012, the 10- and 20-City Composites posted annual increases of 2.1percent and 3.0 percent, respectively.

Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) seasonally adjusted purchase-only house price index reported today that deasonally adjusted house prices rose 4.0 percent from the third quarter of 2011 to the third quarter of 2012. FHFA’s seasonally adjusted monthly index for September was up 0.2 percent from August.prices and rose 1.1 percent from the second quarter to the third quarter of 2012.

With significant growth in home prices during the quarter and a modest inventory of homes available for sale, house price movements in the third quarter were similar to what we observed in the spring,” said FHFA Principal Economist Andrew Leventis. “The past year has seen consistent price increases, but a number of factors continue to affect the recovery in home prices such as stagnant income growth, high unemployment levels, lingering uncertainty about the macroeconomy, and the large number of homes in the foreclosure pipeline.”

FHFA’s expanded-data house price index, a metric introduced in August 2011 that adds transactions information from county recorder offices and the Federal Housing Administration to the HPI data sample, rose 1.0 percent over the latest quarter. Over the latest four quarters,the index is up 3.3 percent. For individual states, price changes reflected in the expanded-datameasure and the traditional purchase-only HPI are compared on pages 21-23 of this report.

Average home prices in the S&P/Case-Shiller 10- and 20-City Composites were each up by 0.3 percent in September versus August 2012. Seventeen of the 20 MSAs and both Composites posted better annual returns in September versus August 2012; Detroit and Washington D.C. recorded a slight deceleration in their annual rates, and New York saw no change.

The 10- and 20-City Case-Shiller Composites have posted positive annual returns for four consecutive months with a +2.1 percent and +3.0 percent annual change in September, respectively. Month-over-month, both Composites have recorded increases for six consecutive months, with the most recent monthly gain being +0.3 percent for each Composite.

“In September’s report all three headline composites and 17 of the 20 cities gained over their levels of a year ago. Month-over-month, 13 cities and both Composites posted positive monthly gains. says David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

“We are entering the seasonally weak part of the year.  The headline figures, which are not seasonally adjusted, showed five cities with lower prices in September versus only one in August; in the seasonally adjusted data the pattern was reversed: one city fell in September versus two in August. Despite the seasons, housing continues to improve.

Blitzer said Phoenix continues to lead the recovery with a +20.4 percent annual growth rate. Atlanta has finally reversed 26 months of annual declines with a +0.1 percent annual rate as observed in September’s housing data. At the other end of the spectrum, Chicago and New York were the only two cities to post annual declines of 1.5 percent and 2.3 percent respectively and were also down 0.6 percent and 0.1 percent month-over-month.

“Thirteen of the 20 cities recorded positive monthly returns; Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland and New York saw modest drops in home prices in September as compared to August; Tampa and Washington D.C. were flat. With six months of consistently rising home prices, it is safe to say that we are now in the midst of a recovery in the housing market.”

As of the third quarter of 2012, average home prices across the United States are back at their mid-2003 levels.  At the end of the third quarter of 2012, the National Index was up 2.2 percent over the second quarter of 2012 and 3.6% above the third quarter of 2011.

As of September 2012, average home prices across the United States for the 10-City and 20-City Composites are back to their autumn 2003 levels. Measured from their June/July 2006 peaks, the decline for both Composites is approximately 29 percent through September 2012. For both Composites, the September 2012 levels are approximately 9 percent above their recent lows seen in March 2012.

In September 2012, 13 MSAs and both Composites posted positive monthly gains. Home prices in Tampa and Washington DC saw no change from August to September. Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland and New York saw a slight drop in prices in September. Phoenix recorded the highest increase in annual rate, up 20.4% from its September 2011 level. Chicago and New York were the only two cities that fared worse year-over-year with respective annual rates of -1.5% and -2.3 percent.

The table below summarizes the results for September 2012.

2012 Q32012 Q3/2012 Q22012 Q2/2012 Q1
LevelChange (%)Change (%)1-Year Change (%)
U.S. National Index135.672.2%7.1%3.6%
September 2012September/AugustAugust/July
Metropolitan AreaLevelChange (%)Change (%)1-Year Change (%)
Atlanta96.060.3%1.8%0.1%
Boston157.26-0.6%0.7%1.9%
Charlotte116.28-0.3%0.6%3.5%
Chicago116.69-0.6%0.7%-1.5%
Cleveland102.10-0.9%1.0%1.4%
Dallas121.570.2%0.1%4.4%
Denver134.010.4%0.5%6.7%
Detroit79.820.7%2.1%7.6%
Las Vegas97.381.4%1.6%3.8%
Los Angeles174.801.0%1.3%4.0%
Miami150.240.1%1.0%7.4%
Minneapolis126.021.1%1.2%8.8%
New York166.10-0.1%0.6%-2.3%
Phoenix120.651.1%1.8%20.4%
Portland141.100.2%0.5%3.7%
San Diego160.091.4%0.9%4.1%
San Francisco143.150.5%0.5%7.5%
Seattle142.090.3%-0.1%4.8%
Tampa134.900.0%0.4%5.9%
Washington192.360.0%0.5%3.2%
Composite-10158.930.3%0.8%2.1%
Composite-20146.220.3%0.8%3.0%
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and Fiserv
Data through September 2012

Since its launch in early 2006, the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices have published, and the markets have followed and reported on, the non-seasonally adjusted data set used in the headline indices. For analytical purposes, S&P Dow Jones Indices publishes a seasonally adjusted data set covered in the headline indices, as well as for the 17 of 20 markets with tiered price indices and the five condo markets that are tracked.

A summary of the monthly changes using the seasonally adjusted (SA) and non-seasonally adjusted (NSA) data can be found in the table below.

2012 Q3/2012 Q22012 Q2/2012 Q1
NSASANSASA
US National2.2%1.1%7.1%2.4%
September/August Change (%)August/July Change (%)
Metropolitan AreaNSASANSASA
Atlanta0.3%1.7%1.8%1.7%
Boston-0.6%0.1%0.7%0.5%
Charlotte-0.3%0.4%0.6%0.4%
Chicago-0.6%-0.7%0.7%-0.1%
Cleveland-0.9%0.6%1.0%0.3%
Dallas0.2%1.0%0.1%0.2%
Denver0.4%1.0%0.5%0.2%
Detroit0.7%0.4%2.1%0.5%
Las Vegas1.4%1.1%1.6%0.8%
Los Angeles1.0%0.8%1.3%1.0%
Miami0.1%0.3%1.0%0.4%
Minneapolis1.1%1.0%1.2%0.4%
New York-0.1%0.3%0.6%0.0%
Phoenix1.1%1.3%1.8%1.4%
Portland0.2%0.7%0.5%0.4%
San Diego1.4%1.7%0.9%0.7%
San Francisco0.5%1.0%0.5%0.1%
Seattle0.3%0.5%-0.1%-0.2%
Tampa0.0%0.0%0.4%0.2%
Washington0.0%0.1%0.5%0.0%
Composite-100.3%0.3%0.8%0.3%
Composite-200.3%0.4%0.8%0.4%
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and Fiserv
Data through September 2012