Business

Cheap homes may spur companies to move to valley

  • Jerry Henkel/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    A billboard advertising America West luxury homes starting at $89 per square foot is seen Aug. 26 along Interstate 15. » Buy this photo

By Jennifer Robison and Hubble Smith
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Sep. 11, 2011 | 2:00 a.m.
Updated: Sep. 11, 2011 | 9:37 a.m.

There's a silver lining in the fact that your home is worth 60 percent less than you paid for it.

As lawmakers and business leaders debate how to diversify the local economy, the city's epic real estate crash is quietly doing the job for them. Housing and land values have retreated to 1990s levels, and that's drawing interest from business executives looking to relocate.

Consider clients of The Boyd Co., a site-selection business based in Princeton, N.J. President John Boyd estimates that he's seen a 30 percent jump in the last two years in clients asking about relocating to Las Vegas. He attributes to the growing attraction to historically low real estate prices.

"We're finding that real estate costs are extremely compelling in Las Vegas," Boyd said.

It's especially compelling to companies looking to move their corporate headquarters, he said.

"And that's the Holy Grail of economic development," Boyd said. "Corporate headquarters bring in highly paid executives and prestige. They advance the image of your city, and they help with local fundraising. A company that moves in may sponsor charity golf tournaments or be active in the United Way. They're very good civic building blocks."

Somer Hollingsworth, president and CEO of the Nevada Development Authority, said his economic-development nonprofit has seen queries involving headquarters relocations double in the last year or so. Those potential transplants ask about real estate often enough that the authority now includes housing and commercial prices in its marketing efforts.

"It's become a whole part of our sales pitch," Hollingsworth said. "It has now become a factor. People are aware of what great deals are here on both sides of the fence (residential and commercial)."

Sure, Las Vegas has other cost advantages in its favor. But it's the city's cheap real estate that may make all the difference in rebuilding its economy.

LOW-COST COMPETITION

Las Vegas claims low business costs in general.

It's true that the city's energy expenses and shipping costs are slightly higher than average. On taxes, the state offers a mixed bag -- no corporate or personal income tax, but no incentives or freebies, either.

Yet Las Vegas has definite pricing advantages overall, Boyd said. Its jobless rate of nearly 14 percent leaves a huge supply of excess labor, which lowers payroll costs.

The city is known nationally for its low property taxes, he added. That's a big deal because many businesses, particularly in the Northeast and the Midwest, pay big property taxes.

On real estate prices, though, Las Vegas really shines. Land prices off the Strip fell 83 percent from their 2007 peak through June, to $157,000 an acre, research from local consulting firm Applied Analysis shows. Commercial vacancy rates in the second quarter ranged from nearly 25 percent for office space to 18 percent for industrial space and 10.1 percent for retail, the firm said. Rents have fallen 5 percent to 10 percent in the last year alone.

"During the boom period, overly expensive land costs were the Achilles heel of Southern Nevada," Boyd said. "That's no longer the case, and it becomes one more advantage in terms of more clients buying land, building buildings, amortizing that over 25 years and making it an annual operating cost."

Falling home prices have been equally precipitous.

The median single-family home's resale value plummeted from $290,000 in October 2006 to $120,000 in August, numbers from the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors show.

Housing prices are a secondary advantage in drawing relocations, particularly of corporate headquarters, Boyd said. That's because the home office brings dozens, or even hundreds, of key executives and employees, all of whom need housing.

"The residential real estate market that's so attractive is part of the building block of attracting corporations to Southern Nevada," he said.

Hollingsworth's group is in talks with a Western technology company to move its corporate headquarters, complete with more than 100 people earning $30 to $40 an hour, to Las Vegas. Executives visited Las Vegas in mid-September for a grand tour. The authority showed them several planned communities and brought in housing experts to talk about average prices on foreclosures.

"When we told them they could buy a brand-new home in Las Vegas for less than $100 a square foot, their jaws dropped," Hollingsworth said. "They said, 'You've got to be kidding.'"

Adam Bruns, managing editor of Site Selection magazine, agreed that housing costs matter in some corporate relocations. He cited a Florida-based health-care business that abandoned a pricey corner of the Sunshine State for relatively cheaper Louisville, Ky.

"The leadership told us in part that they needed to keep their good people, and having them be able to live comfortably for a lot less money was a factor," Bruns said. "It seemed like a relevant factor for that company, though it might not be for others."

What's more, it's a great time to be headhunting for headquarters.

Traditionally, companies might change a warehouse location or send customer-service functions offshore, but moving the home office was off the table. That all changed in 2001, when Boeing transplanted its base from Seattle to Chicago, Boyd said.

In today's cutthroat economic environment, costs matter more than revenue. With companies focused so intently on expenses, Southern Nevada should be in the catbird seat. Companies that decide against moving here often do so because the state lacks incentives, not because its costs are too high or its schools and museums aren't up to snuff, Boyd said.

HOW LOW CAN IT GO?

For a look at just how inexpensive housing has become in Southern Nevada, talk to apartment landlord Scott Sesso.

Sesso offers some of the most affordable housing available in Las Vegas, next to living under a freeway overpass.

He's got one-bedroom units renting for $400 a month -- $450 if you want a ceiling fan -- new flooring and fresh paint. Two-bedroom units are $500 a month at his Island Court Apartments, near the corner of F Street and Owens Avenue in West Las Vegas.

That's considerably less than the $758 monthly average reported by Las Vegas-based business advisory firm Applied Analysis. And Sesso said his occupancy rate is nowhere near the region's 92 percent average. More than half of the 20 units at Island Court are vacant, one since last October.

That's why he's offering a move-in special: $199 for the first month, with no credit check.

"My rents are cheaper than any place around me," Sesso said as he showed an empty unit in the gated complex. "If people are looking for something economical, come west.''

That hasn't always been the case. With 40 percent and 50 percent quarterly appreciation in 2004 alone, median home prices surged to more than $300,000.

Then the bubble burst. Home values fell to 20-year lows, and Las Vegas became one of the nation's most affordable housing markets. A recent report from Discovery Bay, Calif.-based real estate search company Trulia.com ranked Las Vegas No. 1 for buying versus renting, based on the cost for a two-bedroom apartment or town home.

California-based John Burns Real Estate Consulting also ranks Las Vegas at 0.0 -- the lowest possible reading -- on its August housing affordability index.

With a median home price of $120,000, the housing cost-to-income ratio for Las Vegas is 17 percent, compared with 25.5 percent nationwide.

The median home price-to-income ratio is 3.3, which is slightly above the long-term historical norm and near a level conducive to market health, Burns said in his monthly report.

The bottom line?

Housing analyst Dennis Smith, of Home Builders Research, said Las Vegas prices are affordable enough to attract buyers from anywhere in the world.

Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512. Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.

HOUSING AFFORDABILITY INDEX

City Median home price Housing cost/income ratio Index reading
Las Vegas $120,000 17 percent 0.0
Phoenix $123,000 18 percent 0.3
Boise, Idaho $134,183 20 percent 0.5
Reno $151,000 22 percent 0.0
Albuquerque, N.M. $172,675 26 percent 0.0
Salt Lake City $190,896 26 percent 3.5
Denver $230,000 31 percent 5.1
Los Angeles $333,750 45 percent 2.0
San Diego $365,000 45 percent 3.2
San Francisco $721,000 68 percent 3.9

Source: John Burns Real Estate Consulting


The Affordability Index calculates the ratio between housing costs for the median-priced existing home and income levels, analyzed with 28 years of history in each metropolitan area, and compared with the median ratios in each area. The down payment and mortgage payments are weighted based on total expenditures over the life of a typical home purchase. This methodology accurately determines which markets are overpriced and underpriced, even in an environment with historically low mortgage rates. The Index ranges from 0 to 10, from low to high.

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  1. DesertFox Sep. 14, 2011 | 8:26 p.m. Report Abuse

    Companies don't necessarily need an educated workforce. A lot of companies need an uneducated workforce that is content to make $10 - $15 an hour. I moved from a manufacturing town in Iowa that would love to have a go at the uneducated unemployed here. Some of them bus people from as as far away as 50 miles three shifts a day for free. Not everyone can demand $30.00 a hour and get it. I moved here specifically because of the low cost of real estate and couldn't be happier, although I will admit the constant drone of negativity by posters to this and other papers forums did give me reason to pause. I'm so glad I did not listen. Although I brought my job with me, I have had job offers since I have been here. It took my wife all of 2 days to get hired on at a local hospital making $14 an hour more than she could get in Iowa. This is truly paradise for us, if you don't think so, go live in Iowa for a few years. You will be back. Just leave the mosquitoes, tornadoes and oppressive humidity there.

  2. DeltaSigChi4 Sep. 13, 2011 | 8:18 a.m. Report Abuse

    @b.b wrote: I hear all the salesmens hype but I don't see any of the company names that have moved here... You would think there would be at least one name.

    Zappo's.

    @firesnow wrote: Yah, 42% hispanic school district and growing sure looks attractive place to bring your business and family. Why not skip the twenty years it will take LV to become 90 hispanic and move your family to Mexico now. Surely houses are cheaper down there!!

    If you have such a problem with it (*cough* racist), then pack your robes and leave. No one besides the local grandwizard will miss you.

    @Big Julie wrote: If you want to live in that dump pass on the ceiling fan and use the extra money to stock up on ammo 'cause you gonna need it!

    With an attitude like that, you might. With an attitude of respectfulness for your neighbor, and a humble demeanor ...

    E

  3. smokey Sep. 11, 2011 | 7:55 p.m. Report Abuse

    The reason these 2 story paper houses are so cheap is because there are no builders in this town who can build a quality house.When I lived in N.J. Toll Brother live 8 miles from me on a 13 acre farm in New Hope PA.He is the worst builder in N.J and Bucks county PA. but he the best builder in Vegas.wounder why. If it was not for caulk there would be no houses in Vegas.Window out by 1/4 inch caulk it.The building inspector will pass it.Word of advice to these Vegas builders better stay in Vegas because you will not make it any other place.

  4. Tina B Sep. 11, 2011 | 6:42 p.m. Report Abuse

    Meanwhile the Boyd group is building a HUGE house, um, er, little cottage in excess of what most people will make in 7 lifetimes.

    Must be good to be that stinkin rich!

  5. Roger Sep. 11, 2011 | 6:29 p.m. Report Abuse

    So the low housing costs are going to attract businesses, who in turn can hire undereducated people from the unemployed population and in turn pay them low wages....and this is supposed to be good news to the 80% underwater homeowners? you can quote all the bs you want about companies coming in and paying $30-40/hour jobs but unless they are transparent about actual wages I will believe it when I see it...besides $30/hour, isnty that only slightly above what is reported as the median income for LV anyways ???

  6. desertNorwegian Sep. 11, 2011 | 6:14 p.m. Report Abuse

    Plainer why are teachers retiring and quitting instead of moving here? Math, Science and Special Ed jobs are still available. Where are they?

  7. Plainer Sep. 11, 2011 | 4:27 p.m. Report Abuse

    The article left out a critical sector that would be helped by the low cost housing trend : school teachers. I recall reading 5 years or so ago when it was difficult to recruit teachers because housing costs were beyond the means of what we could pay them. Good teachers can now move to the Valley and afford to buy a home.

  8. Big Julie Sep. 11, 2011 | 3:30 p.m. Report Abuse

    If you want to live in that dump pass on the ceiling fan and use the extra money to stock up on ammo 'cause you gonna need it!

  9. Janice.Keller Sep. 11, 2011 | 2:40 p.m. Report Abuse

    Companies need and want an educated population to choose employees from. Many people in the valley have low priority on education and place a higher importance on paying down their maxed out credit cards; to be able to finance a new set of aftermarket rims for their lifted pickup and/or suvs.

  10. n7v.blogspot.com Sep. 11, 2011 | 2:22 p.m. Report Abuse

    Somer Hollingsworth, president and CEO of the [NDA], said his economic-development nonprofit has seen queries involving HQ relocations double in the last year or so.

    NDA goes beyond mere Chamber of Commerce lobbying for more government contracts. It advocates a more formal *partnership* between government and the private sector. That is, where business uses the assets at its disposal to implement the policies of government. And vice versa.

    Hollingsworth is a fascist. NDA is a fascist front group.

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