By Carl Bialik, Nov 21, 08, WSJ
The good news is your home may be worth more than the rock-bottom price that
your neighbors' houses fetched. The bad news: No one but you might think so.
The one point of widespread agreement in the real-estate industry is that
there is no single accurate index of home prices. They are all over the map,
cover different sets of homes and may exclude parts of the country or be unduly
influenced by the mix of homes sold in a given month.
As the home market surged earlier this decade, the two leading indicators of
home prices diverged. One didn't count homes sold with exotic or subprime
mortgages, which fueled much of the bubble. These same properties are often the
ones going on the auction block today at severe discounts, pulling the other
home-price index down -- some say to unrealistic lows.
To address these discrepancies, indexes are going increasingly local. Other,
less-well-known measures of home prices -- some of them available only to paying
customers -- are adjusting to exclude homes sold by banks.
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