Business

Analyst: Housing recovery three-four years away

By Hubble Smith
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Apr. 14, 2011 | 12:19 p.m.

With an overhang of 65,000 vacant homes in the Las Vegas Valley and stagnant new-home formation, the local housing market won't recover for three to four more years, a UNLV economic analyst said Thursday.

That's a conservative estimate, said Bob Potts, assistant director for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas' Center for Business and Economic Research.

Potts revised the number of vacant homes downward from a recent U.S. Census report that showed some 125,000 vacant houses in the valley, or about one out of seven.

Clark County assessor's office records show 814,868 residential units, with 749,269 of them occupied, leaving 8.1 percent vacant, or about one in 12.

Potts excluded U.S. Census tracts with abnormally high vacancy rates such as the Strip area, where thousands of condominiums and condominium-hotel units sit empty, a majority of them unsold and others that may be second or third homes for part-time Las Vegas residents. Nellis Air Force Base, Lake Las Vegas and Mount Charleston were also taken out, as were areas with concentrations of weekly and monthly rentals.

That brought the number down to 95,000. Another 30,000 houses are "structural" vacancies, or part of the normal cycle of people moving in and out of them, he said. That leaves an excess of 65,000 houses, or more than 40 months of supply at average absorption of 1,500 vacant homes a month.

"This is probably somewhere in the neighborhood. A lot of people say it could be seven years of overhang," Potts said at a housing outlook at Springs Preserve.

Many vacant homes are foreclosures and will eventually make their way onto the market, said Dennis Smith, president of Home Builders Research and the outlook's organizer.

"Some will sell and some will never sell," he said. "It's not all negative, but it is what it is. No models were ever created that we can look at and say, 'It's going to take this long.' Nobody knows. You read one thing and then you read another and we just don't know what the banks are going to do to get rid of this excess inventory."

Everybody talks about the "shadow inventory" of foreclosures being held back by banks. What's largely ignored, Frank Nason of Residential Resources said, are "shadow investors" who will be releasing homes on the market. They typically have a holding period of two to three years, he said.

Also, people who have wanted to sell their homes because of divorce, job loss or other reasons will feel more comfortable when they see prices stabilize and start to increase, Nason said.

"We're going to bump along the bottom because the core component of real estate owners are holding on until the market recovers," the Realtor said.

Las Vegas will continue to see an influx of homes that were purchased by investors, rehabilitated and put back on the market for sale, Smith said. Beazer Homes started buying up homes in Phoenix for rehabilitation as rentals and is looking at doing the same in Las Vegas, he said.

About 12,500 vacant homes on the Multiple Listing Service are under purchase contract and another 4,650 rental properties are vacant, Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors President Paul Bell said. Add about 2,500 foreclosures and the total comes to about 20,000.

Realtors sold about 2,000 vacant homes in March, he said.

"I can see why builders are limited to 4,000 units for this year and next and possibly in 2013 they'll start increasing permits by a few hundred," Bell said. "However, things could change."

Housing analyst Smith said traffic through model homes at new subdivisions increased significantly in the first quarter and net sales per subdivision has been running 0.4 to 0.5 a week.

Builders have mostly done a good job of balancing building permits with net sales, keeping standing inventory under 100, he said. D.R. Horton pulled 246 permits in the last six months and closed 299 sales; Lennar pulled 206 permits versus 129 net sales; and KB Home pulled 157 permits versus 234 net sales.

Builders opened 21 new subdivisions since January, but with 12 to 15 finished lots, not 50 to 100 as in the past, Smith said. Competition is intense with KB Home selling 162 homes in the first quarter at an average price of $155,000, or $82 a square foot.

Las Vegas ranked No. 9 in the nation among metropolitan areas with more than 1 million population in terms of housing permits per 1,000 population for the 12-month period through February, Reed Construction Data reported. The permit total for Las Vegas was 6,285, or 3.3 for every 1,000 people.

Smith wanted to know if that number included permits for pools and fences. His number for last year was substantially lower at 4,550. Permits have been "chugging" along at 250 to 350 a month, averaging 269 a month in the first quarter, and are expected to increase during the summer months, he said.

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

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  1. harleyguy Apr. 20, 2011 | 12:19 p.m. Report Abuse

    COMING FROM THE LOWEST POSSABLE POINT,OF COURSE IT LOOKS GOOD

    THE ONLY WAY FOR NV,DUH TO RECOVER,IS FOR THE JOB MARKET TO IMPROVE,AND CURRENT WAGES TO RISE.

    I BET 3-4 YEARS IS CLOSE,BUT 5-7 SEEMS MORE LIGIT.

  2. Roger Apr. 18, 2011 | 6:48 a.m. Report Abuse

    I'm with RandyBoyd...define 'recovery'....if you are looking at 15 years for many people to reach a break even point you can expect problems to continue much longer than 3-4 years....

  3. Alvinjh Apr. 16, 2011 | 1:26 a.m. Report Abuse

    OK..have we insulted all the libs now? Good.

  4. Alvinjh Apr. 16, 2011 | 1:25 a.m. Report Abuse

    "proud democrat wrote on April 14, 2011 01:44 PM: The doom and gloom crowd is back...I say in three years you will start to see houses go up 2% a year" and that is why we say all those things about your reasoning skills and lack of judgment.

    Your chosen name is like a "kick me" invitation tattooed on a junior high school weakling in a locker room full of bullies.

    I'd like to help.

    Change it before you post again.

  5. Alvinjh Apr. 16, 2011 | 1:16 a.m. Report Abuse

    "billionaires will hire us on as gardeners" Hamster--ain't no billionaire gonna hire you for nothing.

    You're too unstable to pull weeds without a guardian.

    You can't even argue for Marx effectively. You might as well be a professor of history at CSN.

  6. Alvinjh Apr. 16, 2011 | 12:46 a.m. Report Abuse

    Boog spelled backwards is goob. Add the -er and you have a real heavyweight contender to explain what Harry Reid promised.

    Um--he did in fact say--he staved off a world wide depression and created wonder bread all in one fell swoop.

    He "saved" Nevada's economy. See? This is what he gave us.

    $4 gas, 13% unemployment housing in the basement for years to come and massive deficits for the next 30 years. But hey. He's at the Ritz and you're not so Goober/Booger you're the light of the left.

    What did Harry promise? I can post some quotes if you like.

    21 months to go.

  7. gehrig Apr. 15, 2011 | 11:00 p.m. Report Abuse

    some local realty guru interviewed on the radio stated that at the present rate of sale of vacant, short sale, and in foreclosure residences, the inventory of those homes would take lots more years than "3 or 4" to wash out. perhaps the article's author is a licensed broker at a large volume realty office. or perhaps not. and if anything fannie and freddie appear to be backing out as the sink trap/lender of last resort. hence loans may be tougher to get. particularly with the gubmit's intentional tweaking of interest/dollar devaluation.

  8. Boog Apr. 15, 2011 | 8:54 p.m. Report Abuse

    Isn't it great to have a high-wattage intellectual like Gary D around to explain reality to the rest of us?

  9. GARY D Apr. 15, 2011 | 4:56 p.m. Report Abuse

    I thought Dirty Harry Reid and Smelly Shelley Berkley were going to help Nevadans !!! ----- Nah - they just want you dopers to keep voting for them. --- they just love belonging to that Washington Country Club / do nothing gang of -535-.

  10. RANDY.BOYD Apr. 15, 2011 | 11:22 a.m. Report Abuse

    WHO'S BUYING IN THIS MARKET? CASH INVESTORS. WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THESE CASH INVESTORS SEE A BETTER INVESTMENT IN ANOTHER SECTOR? THEY WILL PULL THEIR MONEY OUT OR QUIT BUYING PROPERTY. WHAT HAPPENS THEN? THIS RECOVERY THEY ARE FORECASTING IS A MOVING TARGET. LOOK, IN THE 1990'S, BORROWING MONEY WAS EASY. THAT IS ALL GONE NOW. JOBS ARE HARD TO COME BY. THIS RECOVERY WOULD COME SOONER IF WE HAD %6 UNEMPLOYMENT INSTEAD OF %13.5. IT'S REALLY HARD TO BORROW MONEY FROM THE BANK IF YOU HAVE NO JOB. 3 TO 4 YRS MAYBE, IF UNEMPLOYMENT RATE DROPS TOMORROW. MORE LIKE 10 TO 15 YRS TO BREAK EVEN BEING OPTIMISTIC. THE FED IS BORROWING MONEY FROM THE BANKS. IT'S GUARANTEED %3 RETURN ON THEIR MONEY. WHY WOULD THE BANKS RISK IT ? THEY HAVE NO INCENTIVE TO DO SO. THE DECK IS STACKED AGAINST A 4 YR RECOVERY. THE DEFINITION OF A RECOVERY WILL HAVE TO CHANGE.

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