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Home sales soar in LV as prices keep falling




Las Vegas home sales more than doubled in February from the same month a year ago, although median home prices continue to sink as foreclosures dominate the market, the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors reported Tuesday.

Realtors sold 2,288 single-family homes during the month, a 108.4 percent increase from a year ago and up 2.9 percent from January. The median price of a single-family home was $155,603, down 36.9 percent from a year ago.


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  • The inventory of homes available for sale declined 1.6 percent to 22,142, roughly a 10-month supply. The number exceeded 23,000 last summer.

    February statistics are in line with trends seen over the past year or so, Realtors association President Sue Naumann said.

    Although she's encouraged to see more homes selling each month, she knows declining prices are driving those sales. With bank-owned properties accounting for about three-fourths of sales, foreclosures are still forcing home prices to fall, Naumann said.

    "With declining prices, it's even more of a buyer's market and I think buyers are starting to notice this," she said. "Look at the sales numbers. I have six different buyers coming from out of state. They're waiting to see what the economic situation will bring."

    She's showing 1,500-square-foot homes with three bedrooms, 21/2 baths and a two-car garage in the range of $130,000 to $150,000. The $8,000 tax break for first-time home buyers will help, but Naumann said she wishes it could be extended to all buyers.

    Condominium and townhome sales increased 166 percent in February to 442. The median price dropped 50 percent from a year ago to $75,000.

    Home sales peaked at 3,552 in June 2004 and the median price hit its highest point of $315,000 in June 2006, according to the association's historical data.

    Local research firm Applied Analysis showed 20,879 resale listings in the first week of March, down 309 units from the previous week. During the past four weeks, the number of listings declined by nearly 1,000 units.

    The number of contingent and pending units, or units under contract for sale, increased by 183 homes during the past week to 8,129 units, compared with 4,045 units a year ago. It's the highest level since market corrections began two years ago, Applied Analyis reported.

    Owner-occupied homes represented 28.8 percent of all homes listed for sale, while tenant-occupied and vacant properties represented 71.2 percent of inventory. About one-third of homes listed for sale (6,920) were identified as repossessions or were bank-owned.

    Frank Nason of Residential Resources said short sales and real estate-owned, or bank-owned, properties built since 2000 account for 56.2 percent and 53.7 percent, respectively, of February sales.

    Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors statistics are based on data collected through the Multiple Listing Service, which does not account for new homes sold by builders, sales by owners and other transactions not involving a Realtor.

    Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.

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    Report abuse

    David wrote on March 12, 2009 05:05 PM: Showme: Yes, there are homes for under $100 a square. Not that hard to find. I don't know about conditions of the houses, but they are out there.


    Report abuse

    david wrote on March 12, 2009 05:03 PM: axman: It is nothing that complicated. 10 month supply is based on last month's sales vs. total inventory of houses for sale. It really comes out to 9.7 months supply. It is not based on any future sales. Future month's supply will be based on that month's sales vs. total inventory of houses for sale.


    Report abuse

    ShowMe wrote on March 11, 2009 11:29 AM: Is it possible to purchase a house in Vegas for under $100 per square foot? If so, is it something that is a shoddy "fixer upper". I can't buy anything "nice" for under $100 per square foot here in the midwest. Sounds like Vegas is the place to buy a house, reguardless of what houses used to be worth, those prices are all in the past.


    Report abuse

    AxMan's theory on the Surplus diet wrote on March 11, 2009 10:48 AM: I wonder who/how figured 22,000 Homes results in 10 MONTH SUPPLY, which would be an average of 2,200 homes sold each month.

    I suppose it relates to populaiton influx projections per month. So how many people are moving vs. leaving Las Vegas? Is there a positive net per month?

    Assuming two people per home, that would require 4,400 people per month jumping into the market (existing residents) or moving here (new residents).


    Report abuse

    You're Confused wrote on March 11, 2009 07:48 AM: Reality Bites - No wonder you're confused - you aren't comprehending what was written.

    A sale and a listing are two separate things.

    3/4 of sales were bank owned properties.

    1/3 of homes listed for sale were identified as bank owned.

    Two completely different things, even though they both involve bank owned properties.


    Report abuse

    Reality Bites wrote on March 11, 2009 07:26 AM: "With bank-owned properties accounting for about three-fourths of sales, foreclosures are still forcing home prices to fall, Naumann said."

    "About one-third of homes listed for sale (6,920) were identified as repossessions or were bank-owned."

    With reporting stats like this, no wonder some of us are confused. So what are the real facts? Three-fourths or one-third for sale are foreclosures???