"The national composite fell by 2.0% in the first quarter of 2012 and was down 1.9% versus the first quarter of 2011. The 10- and 20-City Composites posted respective annual returns of -2.8% and -2.6% in March 2012. Month-over-month, their changes were minimal; average home prices in the 10-City Composite fell by 0.1% compared to February and the 20-City remained basically unchanged in March over February. However, with these latest data, all three composites still posted their lowest levels since the housing crisis began in mid-2006.""Housing prices have not turned," David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P Indices, says in the report.
Still, there is this modestly good news buried in the numbers: While prices overall were down for the quarter and were below the already low-levels of a year earlier, in 12 cities they did tick up in March from February, as the quarter ended. Those places:
— Charlotte, up 1.2 percent from February.
— Cleveland, up 0.4 percent
— Dallas, up 1.6 percent.
— Denver, up 1.5 percent.
— Los Angeles, up 0.1 percent.
— Miami, up 0.9 percent.
— Phoenix, up 2.2 percent.
— San Diego, up 0.4 percent.
— San Francisco, up 1 percent.
— Seattle, up 1.7 percent.
— Tampa, up 1.3 percent.
— Washington, D.C., up 1 percent.