Filed under: Buyer's Agent, Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips, Investment Properties In Las Vegas, Las Vegas Hi Rise, Las Vegas Realtor, Las Vegas Vacation Homes, New Homes, Scot Savage, home inspections | Tags: Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips, home inspections, LAS VEGAS, Las Vegas Hi Rise, las vegas mid rise condos, las vegas real estate, Las Vegas Realtor, Las Vegas Vacation Homes, Scot Savage
There’s a buzz in the Las Vegas Valley’s residential real estate business.
There’s excitement because Las Vegas set a record for existing-home sales in June, with prices holding steady for the first time in almost two years.
Some real estate pros hope the June housing numbers released last week by the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors are a sign that prospects for the housing market are improving, but analysts cautioned it’s too soon to say the market is recovering.
Experts say the major roadblock to recovery is the same obstacle that boosted inventories and pressured prices into a free fall: foreclosures.
First, the June numbers:
The Realtors report 4,702 single-family homes, town houses and condominiums sold in June, topping the previous record of 4,414 sales in June 2004.
The median price of homes sold in June held its own at $140,000 — the same as May.
That’s the first time there hasn’t been a median price drop since August 2007, when it rose 1.7 percent.
Prices have fallen 38 percent since June 2008 and 55 percent since the peak of $315,000 in June 2006.
“Everybody is asking if this is the bottom, but I don’t care if this is the bottom,” said Steve Bottfeld, executive vice president of Marketing Solutions. “The key question right now is how long are we going to stay on the bottom.”
Although the housing market is heading in the right direction based on June’s sales and prices, the big worry remains foreclosures, Bottfeld said.
A moratorium on foreclosures earlier this year slowed the amount of inventory hitting the market, but lenders are expected to begin offering a substantial number of newly foreclosed homes.
“Until we see those in the coming months, we won’t know when the market is coming back,” Bottfeld said.
Foreclosures dominated the market in June at 74 percent of the sales, according to the Realtors group.
First-time buyers taking advantage of the homes’ affordability and an $8,000 federal tax credit are gobbling up the inventory, and investors are active as well.
MDA DataQuick Information Systems estimate investors comprise 36 percent of the market.
Las Vegas housing analyst Dennis Smith, president of Home Builders Research, said he is not yet predicting the end of the downturn.
The market may have hit bottom in terms of the number of sales, but until prices stabilize and start to increase, no one can say a recovery is near, he said.
Smith said he wouldn’t be surprised if prices fall another $10,000 and level off for a while.
Once prices start rising, investors will leave the market, Smith said. The question will be whether there are enough other buyers to fill the void and sustain a recovery.
But until that happens, the wild card remains foreclosures, Smith said.
By some estimates, 20,000 to 25,000 foreclosed properties have yet to be put on the market and that could double if foreclosures increase as some expect.
“I think that supply is coming, and it is impossible to say if there is enough demand,” Smith said.
And the demand side is dicey: For the housing market to turn, there needs to be job growth. Right now, unemployment is rising and is above 11 percent, Smith said.
“Until people are confident they can stay in those houses and confident they are not going to lose their jobs, they are going to be reluctant to buy,” Smith said. “The best thing that could happen for the housing market is an improved job market. Then there won’t be sales just to investors.”
Las Vegas housing analyst Richard Lee, first vice president at First American Title, said the record number of sales has captured a lot of attention in the real estate community.
That’s the good news, but the bad news is that the foreclosed properties are the ones being sold. That’s what driving the market because most sales are lower-priced homes, especially those less than $150,000, Lee said. Prices stopped falling in June because there was enough demand to meet that price in the market, he said.
Lee said he wonders whether there will be enough buyers for many higher-priced homes — between $350,000 and $1 million — once the supply of lower-priced homes dwindles.
“I think a lot of people who can afford a $500,000 home don’t know quite yet what’s happening to the economy and are not comfortable buying in this situation,” Lee said.
Tim Sullivan, president of Sullivan Group Real Estate Advisors, said that, although the housing market is close to its bottom, what is different is this recovery will lag compared with past recoveries.
One reason is that real estate growth is driven by jobs, he said. In addition, during the 2001 recession, the housing market didn’t contract, and the market must pay a price for overdevelopment earlier this decade.
“We are paying double this time,” Sullivan said.
Filed under: Buyer's Agent, Getting a Mortgage, Investment Properties In Las Vegas, Las Vegas Realtor, Scot Savage | Tags: las vegas real estate, Las Vegas Realtor, Scot Savage, Getting a Mortgage, Las Vegas Vacation Homes, Home Buyers Tips, home inspections, Green Valley Ranch, Desert Shores, Eldorado, Green Valley, LAS VEGAS
May housing data strongly suggests that Las Vegas reached the bottom of the residential recession in the 2nd quarter of this year.
There are four reasons for that conclusion:
1. EXISTING HOME SALES CONTINUED TO EXCEED THE CREATION OF FORECLOSURES: May was the third consecutive month in which the number of foreclosures purchased exceeded the number of foreclosures created. In our mind, that is the beginning of a trend. The impact created by the end of the foreclosure moratorium on March 6 may interrupt this trend later this summer. But, the trend now looks solid.
2. SALES CONTINUE STRONGLY: May marked the 17th consecutive month of increasing existing home sales. May’s 4,476 existing home sales were a 66% improvement over the same period last year and a 10.2% improvement over April’s sales.
3. INVENTORY IS AT THE LOWEST POINT IN MORE THAN THREE YEARS: At current sales rates, the 13,667 available listings – the lowest since January 2006 – represents just 4.3 months of supply. A “hot” market is defined as one with 3 months of supply or less. Financial institutions now sit on approximately 14,000 REO’s in Las Vegas and are certain to add more in the future, but will likely to continue releasing them for sale at a systematic, rational rate. We know that it is in the best interests of the financial institutions involved to be judicious in the number of REO’s they release each month.
4. EXISTING HOME PRICES SLID JUST 2.4% LAST MONTH. That’s the smallest decline since March 2008 and a hopeful sign for the future.
Here are some additional details:
Existing home sales and foreclosures were the dominant statistics for May, as they have been for the last several months. But, now supply is edging into the picture.
For the 17th consecutive month, existing home sales improved. Almost two thirds of the existing home closings (64%) in May were bank owned homes (foreclosures) with a median price of $106,000. The balance was non-bank owned homes with a median closing price of $140,000. The number of foreclosures in May was 1,769, a 26% decrease from last year, but an increase over April. The new residential market suffers a distinct pricing disadvantage against the Existing home market. It hasn’t left the starting gate … and won’t until there is less of a price discrepancy. Currently, the average price per square foot of a new home is $106.59. Compare that to the average price of an existing home: $77.41. That’s one reason why May’s new home sales remained in triple figures (383, an increase of 25 units over April). The median price of a new home sold was $211,489, a drop of 2.4% from April. The minimal drop in price echoes what is happening in the Existing home segment of the market. New home inventory is also in decline. There were just 298 new home permits “pulled” in May. And, the number of new home communities slid to 300 – a 48.2% drop off the peak of 579 recorded in July 2007.
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Filed under: Buyer's Agent, Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips, Las Vegas Realtor, New Homes, Scot Savage, Uncategorized | Tags: housing, LAS VEGAS, obama, real estate, Stimulus
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Filed under: Getting a Mortgage, Las Vegas Realtor, Scot Savage | Tags: Getting a Mortgage, las vegas real estate
For your initial meeting with your mortgage lender, remember to bring the following papers. These documents are essential if the mortgage lender is to assess you properly.
For your first meeting with a mortgage lender you should bring:
- Bank account information, including account numbers and recent account statements
- Tax returns, W-2 withholding forms, pay stubs, and other proof of employment
- Recent credit card bills
- Canceled checks for utility bills and loans
- Gift letters
If you have these papers on hand for the mortgage lender’s visit, your mortgage loan application process will be sped up. The typical application can take anywhere from one to six weeks. Once you submit your mortgage application, as well as submit additional financial information. As with all information requested of you, provide it quickly. This will minimize delays in your mortgage loan application process.
Each year, more and more mortgage loan lenders become available, and more and more financial products are introduced into the market. With so much variety to choose from, choosing the right mortgage package for you can become bewildering. If you are wary of the stress and hassle that usually comes with taking out a mortgage loan, Stop, just call Scot Savage for a referral to a great lender. 702-261-9048
Filed under: Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips, Las Vegas Realtor | Tags: Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips
Scott Reynolds and his staff at FIRST HORIZON HOME LOANS research on the types of mortgages available to you and find the one that best suits your needs. There are a number of considerations to be made in terms of finding the best mortgage for each individual:
*Do you want a fixed mortgage rate, where you will always know what your payment is going to be?
*What are your long-term goals? Do you intend to resell the property? Do you only need the mortgage for a short time? Work with Scott Reynolds at FIRST HORIZON HOME LOANS (702-274-9000) and then we can shop for your dream home with knowledge and conficence!
After you call Scott, CALL SCOT SAVAGE AT 702-261-9048
Filed under: Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips | Tags: Getting a Mortgage, Home Buyers Tips, las vegas real estate



