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Home slump in LV persists

Latest sales report shows big declines

Home Builders Research reported another dismal month for housing in Las Vegas, with new and existing home sales falling by double-digit percentages in April, home building analyst Dennis Smith said Wednesday.

He counted 1,568 recorded new home sales in April, a 40.7 percent decline from the same month a year ago. Existing home sales fell 36.6 percent to 2,353, the second-lowest monthly total in the past six years.

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  • "This correction or slump or slide or dip or whatever you want to call it is deeper and longer than most expected," Smith said. "It will get better, but until sales and permits improve, it will continue to be very painful for a lot of folks and businesses."

    There were 1,804 new home permits pulled in April, bringing the year-to-date total to 6,210, down 38.3 percent from a year ago.

    Las Vegas' housing market has softened after leading the nation in home appreciation and sales, which led to a frenzy of speculative investment that has left about 40 percent of the 22,000 homes on the Multiple Listing Service vacant, Smith said.

    New home inventory is low as builders have cut back on building permits, Pardee Homes Division President Klif Andrews said.

    "As the new home inventory drops, we think the resale inventory will drop. When they drop, this market will firm up," he said. "We all agree we have limited land supply and we continue to have strong economic growth in Las Vegas, regardless of residential construction. The key for us is residential listings must drop before this market improves. Part of that is owners are not pricing their houses properly and that's why they're not selling."

    The median price of a new home in April dropped 3.1 percent to $318,346, Home Builders Research reported. There were 214 high-rise condo units that closed escrow in April, all but one of them at Sky Las Vegas on the Strip. The average price was $729,009 and the median was $687,181.

    The median resale price was $285,000, the same as March and up from $283,500 a year ago.

    Robin Camacho of Direct Access Lending said she can see that the median price isn't accurately reflecting house values right now, but she can really only make an educated guess as to why.

    "Our research does show that the number of homes listed on the MLS for less than $270,000 has increased substantially in the past year," she said. "This indicates that prices are falling, though people are actually still paying the same but getting more for their money."

    Camacho said she can spot when prices are rising or falling earlier than most analysts with her up-to-the-minute data, but she hesitates to give exact figures as she uses a different indicator.

    "It is very accurate in terms of direction, sort of like a compass in that I can see the general direction we are traveling," she said. "And what I definitely see is that houses are dropping in value at a steeper decline than the median price indicates."

    Luxury home sales ($1 million or more) declined 18 percent in the first quarter to 132, but April sales jumped to 53, two more than a year ago, said Ken Lowman, owner of Luxury Homes of Las Vegas. The average price rose to $1.79 million, compared with $1.26 million in April 2006.

    Lowman said more homes are selling in the "ultrahigh end of the market," including eight in April above the $3 million mark.

    "I foresee this trend to continue as higher lot and construction prices have led to more homes being constructed and sold over $3 million than ever before in our history," Lowman said. "We also have a steady stream of qualified buyers in this price range relocating to Las Vegas."

    Smith of Home Builders Research high-rise sales can skew the median prices because they usually come in groups. Before Sky, the median was skewed by all of the closings at the Manhattan mid-rise condos, he said.



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    Brian Ragen wrote on July 01, 2007 07:02 PM: To darth vader: My comments were indeed tongue-in-check. Next time I will try to make that clear. I agree with you that prices are still way out of line with incomes.


    Shamequa wrote on May 29, 2007 03:01 PM: Good mebbe me an my kids can get us a house.


    Wild Bill wrote on May 21, 2007 09:07 PM: Still cheaper than Santa Monica. Still cheaper than Seattle.
    Hell, still cheaper than Missoula, MT!!
    Could be cheaper though. Time to wait and see. Buy stock in bulldozers.


    darth vader wrote on May 18, 2007 07:17 PM: Regan...Your comments have got to be a joke or you are smoking some bad stuff or are a coolaide drinker for the Real Estate industry...The market is going to head down another 20 ton 30 percent before equilibrium in pricing occurs in the market....


    Mr Bubbles wrote on May 18, 2007 02:50 AM: "We all agree we have limited land supply "

    Yes there not making any desert north of Las Vegas anymore there is just home after home all the way to Canada.!!!


    Brian Ragen wrote on May 17, 2007 09:34 PM: If we want to know where the LV market is heading, all we have to do is heed the following prediction, issued about one month ago at a housing seminar in LV:

    [As to when the down cycle will reverse,] Steve Bottfeld of Marketing Solutions said it may be sooner than everyone thinks. He made two predictions at Crystal Ball.

    "One, we're at the bottom of the real estate cycle. We go up from here, starting in May," Bottfeld said to a round of applause. "Two, when will prices finally be affected by sales? Let me show you."

    He then put up a picture on the video screen of a frozen lake with the word, "Hell," on it.

    So, according to Mr. Bottfeld, slowing sales will not in any way lead to a lowering of prices. Sellers, take comfort.


    alan berk wrote on May 17, 2007 05:26 PM: 40 per cent of homes for sale vacant-

    You would think new home builders would get the point!!

    Las Vegas does not need any more over-priced tract homes built an hour from any job!

    Same with the people looking for a home-
    there are thousands of already built homes - why don`t you buy one in an older neighborhood!!

    There are thousands of homes just east of UNLV that are a bargain compared to homes in summerlin and the northwest!

    anywhere along harmon down to boulder hi-way- or between tropicana and flamingo below maryland parkway

    From those neighborhoods- it`s 11 minutes to the airport

    10 minutes to the corner of flamingo and the strip and thousands of jobs!

    15 minutes to the convention center!

    when are people going to wake-up and live close to where they work!

    over-priced homes and gas at 4 dollars a gallon- time to re-think living in places like the northwest- summerlin or mountains edge- you people are crazy to be doing this






    Dave P. wrote on May 17, 2007 01:30 PM: Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke issued a double-barreled warning on the U.S. economy, saying the housing market will continue to struggle and the Fed sees ``significant risks'' in the leveraged-buyout boom.


    David R Huntington wrote on May 17, 2007 11:47 AM: It's about time realtors fessed up and admitted that real estate prices are dropping. They are only looking out for themselves and care not if clients buy houses that are grossly over priced.


    JD wrote on May 17, 2007 11:12 AM:

    The entire Las Vegas market is overpriced.


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