Las Vegas News, Sports, Business, Entertainment and Classifieds

Las Vegas Review-Journal - Business

Saturday
Jul 31, 2010
Clouds And Sun
Clouds And Sun 101° Weather Forecast

RECENT EDITIONS
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

sponsored by
Business


Observers see hopeful signs for real estate

Official says builders seem to have bought local construction-ready lots




Some real estate professionals see a shaft of light in the real estate market gloom enveloping Southern Nevada, although another analyst says he still sees little more than a glimmer so far.

The optimistic outlook came from Richard Lee, vice president of First American Title Co., and Richard "Rick" Myers, president of the Thomas & Mack Development Group, who spoke Wednesday at a meeting of CCIM Southern Nevada at the Rio.


Most Popular Stories
  1. Boyd won't bid on Station Casinos' properties
  2. Silverton to restore part of employees' slashed pay
  3. Bank of NLV ordered to increase its capital
  4. Shares of gaming companies wilt in July
  5. IN BRIEF
  6. FTC: No more upfront fees for companies to help consumers



Lee said it appeared to him that most of the attractive finished lots -- those ready for construction -- in Las Vegas have been purchased by builders.

"If they are not gone, they're not desirable," Lee said.

But, he added: "National builders are back. That's the only positive thing I've heard in 18 months."

Myers said his company has sold three subdivisions of residential lots for Nevada State Bank.

"Now that the lots are getting grabbed up, people are starting to look at raw land," he said.

Dennis Smith, president of Home Builders Research, didn't participate in the panel, and he acknowledged that attractive lots are being sold locally. However, he has a more pessimistic view than Myers and Lee.

Smith's company is preparing an updated study on finished lots and his preliminary results suggest the Las Vegas area has 17,500 finished lots either owned by builders, banks or investors. But some of those are owned by investors waiting for land values to appreciate, rather than homebuilders, Smith said.

He counted another 2,500 lots that are available for sale.

"There is a very limited number of finished lots that meet the criteria of the builders that are buying today," Smith said.

Builders want lots with 4,000 to 6,000 square feet, and they have little interest in 2,500-square-foot lots, he said. The bigger lots are going for $25,000 to $45,000, Smith said, compared with $100,000 at the peak of the housing boom.

Not all builders are buying, either, Smith said, citing Pulte Homes and Ryland Homes. Pardee Homes is selling its finished lots. Richmond American Homes, KB Home, D.R. Horton and Harmony Homes are buying, Smith said.

Most builders are closing on about two homes a month, Smith said.

During the meeting at the Rio, speakers saw little reason for optimism about the real estate market of most interest to the attendees, the commercial real estate market.

Ray Walsh, vice president of repossessed real estate at City National Bank, said banks are braced for a wave of problems in 2011 and 2012 when many loans mature and owners will need to refinance. Walsh predicted it would take five years to work through all the bad commercial real estate loans.

Walsh offered one bit of good news: "Five hundred billion (dollars) in private equity (money) is sitting on the sidelines waiting to come into this market."

Larry Singer, a Grubb & Ellis vice president and receiver for properties in default, predicted most commercial real estate will not sell for another five years. Many lenders are leaving receivers in control of commercial property, rather than foreclosing on the property, Singer said.

Bill Martin, chief executive officer of Service1st Bank, was asked why banks are unwilling to make new loans on commercial real estate. Martin answered that bank regulators, who were blindsided by the real estate bust, have tightened their regulatory oversight.

"Now, they are playing catch-up," he said. "They clearly have the message: 'Don't mess up again.'"

As a result, no banker "is going to do any real estate loan that has the least bit of a speculative part to it," Martin said.

Service1st would like to make more loans, he said, because it has $70 million in liquid assets earning one-quarter to 1 percent and those low returns are causing operational losses.

An accounting rule forces banks to write down loans if the borrower is not paying under his original terms and a loan guarantor cannot step forward to assist, Martin said.

Contact reporter John G. Edwards at jedwards@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0420.

Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

Comments (17)

Share your thoughts on this story.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

X

Register to comment

* Indicates fields that are required
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Male Female

Already registered? Log in now

X

Already registered to comment?

Log in below
E-mail
Password

Forgot your password? | Register
X

Forgot your password?

Enter your e-mail address below and a password will be resent to you.

Email
Terms & Conditions
The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Report abuse

johnfromdowntown wrote on November 02, 2009 06:28 AM: Articles like this make me wonder why LVRJ feels the need to be the PR arm of the local real estate industry. We deserve solid objective reporting instead of cheerleading.


Report abuse

perry wrote on November 02, 2009 04:49 AM: las vegas will be the last city to recover because we depend on tourism and construction. commercial building is dead in the water. we can only hope they do alot remodel in casino. hey MIKE-HEATH i agreed what u said. all our problem in this city was cause by people not looking ahead crappy lending habit and you know what its going to happen again we will not learn what happen b 4. people will be careful on how they used there money i know i will. people will look for bargain. they city will have to be patience and diversified.


Report abuse

perry wrote on November 02, 2009 04:37 AM: theres no recovery for this city in 2010 next foreclosure will be commercial building and high end building and more housing


Report abuse

k.b wrote on October 29, 2009 01:19 PM: The new custom homes arriving soon will not only be energy independent, but will also be able to grow a large number of different vegetables and fruits. The days of very small tract type SFD lots may very well be over, builders can`t make money and banks will not take risks in that market for a long time.


Report abuse

Mike_Heath wrote on October 29, 2009 11:17 AM: Nobama:

I have voted Republican in every single presidential election that I have been eligible to vote in. However, even I recognize that Obama has little to do with the current state of the Las Vegas economy. The wheels for this train were put on their present course due to years of greed, bad policy making, and inefectual regulation at all levels of society and government. There is not a political party, level of government, or socio-economic group that is not partially to blame. While I disagree with much of Obama's philosophies, I am more afraid of narrow minded,shallow people like yourself who, whether conservative or liberal, pay no attention to the real causes of societal problems and therefore are doomed to repeat them.


Report abuse

SamT wrote on October 29, 2009 11:17 AM: @Stella: Properly viewed, the economy has entered another debt-funded bubble, not a recovery.

Your recovery will be short-lived. You can bet on it.


Report abuse

Joe Bama wrote on October 29, 2009 11:16 AM: Vice president of repossessed real estate. Does that account for a job saved or created under the obama stimulus Stella?


Report abuse

dt wrote on October 29, 2009 10:48 AM: The hopeful sign is that our kids may one day be able to afford a home!


Report abuse

Stella wrote on October 29, 2009 10:17 AM: "Obama lied and millions are now poor and homeless."

Typical far+ and blame the dog Republican. We are entering economic recovery and the morons are still trying to blame the guy who's fixing their mess.


Report abuse

V wrote on October 29, 2009 09:55 AM: Meanwhile, DR Horton has built about 100 homes in their community adjacent to where I live with many more just starting. That particular neighborhood is a foreclosure hot zone and I don't know how DR Horton is going to be able to compete with so many bank owned properties already in their own community. Most of these houses were originally built in 2005-2006 and bought for $325,000-$400,000+. Now I'm seeing resales in the mid to high $100's.


Read All Comments