Home Subscribe Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

News


Hot seller's market shifts into reverse

Upside-down sales picture won't change soon



Photo by John Gurzinski.

Locals who have tired of real estate's roller-coaster ride will have to hang on a little longer: Southern Nevada is at least several months away from stabilized home prices and sales, two analysts said at a housing-industry outlook Thursday.

Homeowners can expect a sustained slide in property values at least into early 2008, and perhaps into 2009, the 500 or so attendees at SalesTraq's Crystal Ball seminar learned.

Larry Murphy, president of real estate research firm SalesTraq, said the current market is a reversal of the heady days of early 2004, when buyers lined up by the hundreds outside planned subdivisions to snap up the first few homes in each release.

Sellers who put existing homes on the market had numerous offers within hours, including bids well beyond their asking price.


Most Popular Stories
  • MOUNT CHARLESTON: Four die in plane crash
  • Two couples died in crash
  • NORM: Steve Wynn goes for mega-yacht
  • FAMILY SERVICES: Three visits preceded boy's death
  • NORM: Kirshner works on big Vegas project
  • NORM: Playboy models in state spotlight
  • Body of diver who jumped off 90-foot Lake Mead cliff found
  • NORM: Playboy 'coed': Dad's OK with it
  • NORM: Elvis fan club will have star its way
  • NORM: Curtain falling on Stage Deli



  • Today, it's much easier to buy a home, and much tougher to sell one.

    Several builders, including Lennar Corp., Pulte Homes, Astoria Homes and Beazer Homes, have slashed prices on standing inventory.

    Builders have offered October price breaks of as much as 20 percent, with up to $250,000 in markdowns on a single home.

    New-home sales in September skidded 52 percent, while prices dipped 3.3 percent. Builders have a standing inventory of 2,500 to 3,000 homes.

    Nor has the market's downturn spared existing homes.

    September's median price sagged 8.9 percent when compared with September 2006, and sales tumbled 49.9 percent in the same period. Yet, inventory has swamped the market, jumping tenfold since spring 2004 to September's supply of 27,417 properties. That inventory means local real estate values will have depreciated 5 percent to 10 percent by the end of 2007, Murphy predicted.

    So, when will the market come back to life?

    Give it 12 months to 18 months, Murphy said.

    Based on September's inventories and sales rates, Southern Nevada has about a 19-month supply of existing homes and a three-month supply of new homes.

    The market will have hit bottom when supplies stop rising and prices stop declining, Murphy said.

    Before that happens, expect the median price of a resale home to drop from $263,075 in September to around $240,000 or $250,000.

    On the other side of that nadir, though, is another bounce in housing sales and prices, Murphy predicted, as a $33 billion building binge in the city's resort sector comes online and generates thousands of new jobs.

    Murphy said he expects the next market surge to start in the second half of 2009 or the first half of 2010, after the $1.8 billion Palazzo, the $2.2 billion Wynn Encore and the $7.4 billion CityCenter have opened.

    "Trust me, there is another real estate boom coming," Murphy said.

    Another local real estate watcher said he expects the Las Vegas housing market to bottom out much sooner than Murphy anticipates, with a new market peak to come on the other side of today's rough times.

    Steve Bottfeld, an analyst with research firm Marketing Solutions, said he sees signs that the housing downturn has evened out. The market could leave the doldrums as soon as the first or second quarter of 2008, Bottfeld said.

    Foreclosures fell 8 percent nationwide in September after reaching a 32-month high in August, according to data from California consultant RealtyTrac.

    In Las Vegas, the foreclosure rate dropped from one for every 165 households, or 6,197 foreclosures, in August to one for every 185 households, or 5,504 filings, in September.

    Countrywide Home Loans' announcement this week that it would put $16 billion toward refinancing adjustable-rate mortgages scheduled to reset to higher interest rates will present a "strong hold against foreclosures," Bottfeld said.

    Plus, the inventory of existing homes, though historically high at more than 27,000 listings, is stable and hasn't increased significantly this fall, Bottfeld said.

    He noted that today's softening numbers of closings and prices represent a snapshot of the market as it was 60 days to 120 days ago. September's data includes sales made before the Federal Reserve added $5 billion in cash to the economy and cut by half a percent the rate banks use to determine the mortgage interest they'll charge.

    Statistics from coming months and quarters should reflect the resulting boost in available credit.

    What's more, an unstable stock market could benefit housing, because uncertainty in financial markets has traditionally pushed investors to trade in paper wealth for the more-tangible asset of real estate, Bottfeld said.

    A limited local supply of privately owned land will also push prices upward in the long term, as will construction of megaresorts along the Strip. The first of those new resorts, the Las Vegas Sands Corp.'s Palazzo, is scheduled to open in December.

    "A boom in hotel rooms will precede a boom in real estate," Bottfeld said. "We're treading on the bottom of the market now."

    Other crystal ball observations:

    • Nevada is tied with Hawaii at No. 2 for the share of its residents' income that goes toward housing. Nevada homeowners spend an average of 46 percent of their wages on housing payments. California is No. 1, with an average of 52 percent of every paycheck going toward mortgages, Bottfeld said.

    • The housing slump is generating lean times for sales associates.

    The average sales rate per new-home subdivision in 2006 was five houses per month; today, that average is about two houses a month. With a standard two sales people per subdivision sharing the two sales and earning a commission of 1 percent, that means some agents can no longer afford the homes they're selling, Murphy said.

    • Affordable pricing hasn't inoculated builders and sellers from a down market. Sales volume was down 53 percent in the third quarter among homes priced below $200,000, Murphy said.

    By contrast, the number of sales among homes priced at more than $1 million was up 368 percent in the quarter, and some Realtors who specialize in luxury sales are having banner years, he said.

    Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or (702) 380-4512.

    FROM A SELLER'S MARKET TO A BUYER'S MARKET
    Both new and existing homes are worth less than they were a year ago thanks to a combination of increasing supplies and fewer buyers. Here are September's inventory and sales numbers:

    NEW HOMES
      Active
    subdivisions
    Closings Median price
    2007 566 1,328 $312,639
    2006 531 2,765 323,232
    EXISTING HOMES
      MLS
    Inventory
    Closings Median price
    2007 27,417 1,466 $263,075
    2006 21,409 2,926 $288,750
    Source: SalesTraq


    Leave Your Comment 49 Reader Comments
    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.
    Current Word Count:

    one of the vultures wrote on November 30, 2007 06:57 AM: I agree, i can't wait(but will), but not stupid! I have time to wait. Prices will crash, and sorry to say i'll be first in line to steal these homes. The more pain the better. Sorry, that's how the world seems to work.


    NV Inactive Realtor wrote on November 26, 2007 03:33 PM: Foreclosures will DRIVE DOWN housing prices in Las Vegas another 35% plus within the next 18 to 24 months.

    Lending guidelines require that appraisers use the most recent comps from the last 6 months but stipulations can be made for up to one year by an underwriter as being acceptable.

    Once the banks realize that these properties are not going to sell for 2006 prices and come back down to earth and unload these properties around 40 to 50% of present market value then and only then will the housing market have an opportunity to self correct.

    Until then the Las Vegas housing market is dead other than to a few must buy type buyers or finanically sound investors who are able to presently come in buy low now and hold for at least 5 years.

    A social growth infrastructure is another avenue that Las Vegas has yet to realize. Teachers, Nurses and other professionals that help a city reach acceptable society standards has not been achieved yet by Las Vegas.

    These must have professionals can not afford to live within Las Vegas on their present salaries with the current housing and living cost.

    Until these changes are made to help facilitate health care and educational growth, Las Vegas is doomed to become a city for either the rich and famous only or dry up and blow away.


    BH wrote on November 25, 2007 12:03 PM: PIXIE DUST!!!

    Recently there was a report that stated Las Vegas foreclosure rate is 1 in 51. Now the sudden more favorable rate of 1 in 185 rate appears. The 1 in 185 rate is about what the USA scale is.

    The 27k + homes on the market is about a 3 year supply provided no more houses come on the market.

    The realascum are still sucking the on completely dry housing boom teat.

    Thinking positive only makes the defeat more painful! GET REAL! Look at the track record of the last year.


    PuckerUP wrote on October 30, 2007 11:07 AM: October 30th. The latest figures are out and well my little pin headed boys and girls in the real estate industry pricing is falling like a hot knife thru goose shit!Oh yea, right, but the sellers are not dropping their prices,Eh? Better tell those greater fools to get with the program, no? Well then be ready for 2 to 3 more years of pain. This aint 2005 anymore and the buyers have gottening alttle smarter, although there is always the hope of another sucker being born who will buy your cracker boxed stucco "mini mansion" for twice what its worth...NOT!


    Buckwheat wrote on October 28, 2007 11:14 PM: Having read the 2 year old article referenced below, I wanted to go out and take a bull whip to these shills Murphy and Smith for the BS they have perpetrated upon the Las Vegas community. Even now they are apologetic for the Bubble Bursting. I would string these two up along with the whole GLVAR bunch between the Welcome to Las Vegas sign and whip their asses until they bled!


    Joe Friday wrote on October 28, 2007 10:32 PM: Has anyone figured out how the market is going to magically turn around next year when there are 4 years worth of inventory?

    Jeff D's post was so great I am going to post it again in hopes that nobody misses it:

    "Want to see what SalesTraq's Larry Murphy was saying exactly 2 years ago?

    Read this:

    LOTS GOING ON IN VEGAS..NO BUBBLE HERE!!!"

    Unfortunately there are lots of dumb people who believe that guy. I wonder if he believes himself or is he just another bottom-feeding real estate agent?


    Michael Z. Williamson wrote on October 28, 2007 08:44 PM: I'd like to point out that not all real estate agents are Realtors. Unless things have changed, Realtors have to abide by guild ethics, maintain education and have minimum standards of education in law, financing, contracting, etc.

    Any idiot can be an "agent."

    In either case, it's incumbent on the buyer to be able to afford the investment, whether for living or resale. If you can't, you're a sucker. No sympathy, no bail out on my tax dollars, I hope you starve in the street.


    HelloLasVegas wrote on October 28, 2007 09:52 AM: Howdy Schmuckos! I'm living large and laughing easy here in Sunny San Diego having made a killing in your market and selling a couple stucco boxes for twice what I paid for them! Yowsiree! Oops, my profits just went up in smoke so to speak as the Lord took his revenge on my greedy fat ass! No problem, you schmuckos in Vegas will be ripe for plucking again in a couple years after the flush out in home prices leaves some real bargains for the vultures that are circling waiting for circa 2000 prices to return. They will, Vegas has always been the Californians funny money playpen! Developers, grifters, "smiling jack" salesmen with a shoeshine and a story of riches, you yahoos always fall for it and are easy marks! Hell, that's why Las Vegas was created, to shear the sheep who think that they can become rich quick in the desert! Well, back to rummaging around the ashes of my latter day estate. At least the pool survived.


    Ed wrote on October 28, 2007 05:49 AM: "Realtors grow backbone and cancel over priced listings... Valley inventory reduced by 50%"

    Ahhh... wishful thinking.

    It could happen.


    Schmucko wrote on October 27, 2007 11:04 AM: I am happy as hell that the chickens have come home to roost on the heads of the developer grifters,liar loan enablers and GLVAR SOB's! I hope the meltdown wipes them off the face of Clark County. Let the stripper real estate agents and cocktail waitress order takers at these developments go back to whoring and scoring. The other real estate "professionals" in the lending and sales end can also go back to car hopping and jerking sodas. The real estate market of the last five years was a total joke andthose falling victim, well no sympathy, they played the game and lost. Too bad so sad. I sold my two "investments" in late 2005 to a couple of greater fools thinking they were going to cash in on the american dream in Summerlin. I paid $309,000 and $410,000 for two homes in Red Rock Country Club in 2001. Sold them in the mid $800's late 2005. Absolute insanity. I now live free and clear. Why do I boast? To let you know that the vermin like me are still out here, just waiting for the game to play out and then we will pick up the leavings. The majority of buyers and sellers are unsophisticated Schmuckos! This correction will go on for the next two or three years. Prices are coming down. Buy now at your own risk. The smart money is on the sidelines lurking!


    Read All Comments