VIP BAZAAR | Los Angeles 

August 1, 2009

Housing near bottom: begins slow rebound

Filed under: Las Vegas, Mortgage News — Matt G @ 6:12 pm

By ADRIAN SAINZ, DAVID TWIDDY, DANIEL WAGNER, ALEX VEIGA, Associated Press Writers Adrian Sainz, David Twiddy, Daniel Wagner, Alex Veiga, Associated Press Writers – Sat Aug 1, 10:39 am ET
It was — note the past tense — the worst housing recession anyone but survivors of the Great Depression can remember.

From the frenzied peak of the real estate boom in 2005-2006 to the recession’s trough earlier this year, home resales fell 38 percent and sales of new homes tumbled 76 percent. Construction of homes and apartments skidded 79 percent. And for the first time in more than four decades of record keeping, home prices posted consecutive annual declines.

A staggering $4 trillion in home equity was wiped out, and millions of Americans lost their homes through foreclosure.

Now take a deep breath and exhale. The worst is over.

By every measure, except foreclosures, the housing market has stabilized and many areas are recovering, according to a spate of data released in the past two weeks. Nationwide, home resales in June are up 9 percent from January, on a seasonally adjusted basis. Sales of new homes have climbed 17 percent during the same period. And construction, while still anemic, has risen almost 20 percent since the beginning of the year.

Even home prices, down one third from the top, edged up in May, the first monthly increase since June 2006.

“The freefall is over,” says Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

The problem is that, Baker, like many economists, expects the housing market will “be bouncing around the bottom” for the second half of the year.

There are also real threats that could poison this budding recovery. The unemployment rate, which is 9.5 percent, is expected to surpass 10 percent, leaving even more homeowners unable to pay their mortgages. Mortgage rates could rise, making homeownership less affordable. And the federal tax credit for first-time homebuyers, which has lured many into the market, is set to expire on Nov. 30.

“As long as jobs are being lost, regardless of all the federal programs out there to help the borrowers, you’re still going to have problems in the housing market,” says Steve Cumbie, executive director of the Center for Real Estate Development at the University of North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School.

True, but when you’ve got bidding wars for foreclosures in places like Las Vegas, Phoenix and Los Angeles, it’s time to call the bottom.
• West

For years Las Vegas symbolized the boom, as mile after mile of desert gave way to three-bedroom homes and swimming pools. Then came the crash and it symbolized something else: a decade of speculation and excess.

Now, Las Vegas is one of the hottest housing markets in the region again. This city has always profited from others’ misfortune, and the same can be said of the current housing market.

In Clark County, Nev., home to Sin City, one in every 11 homes had received at least one foreclosure-related notice in June, according to RealtyTrac. The glut of deeply discounted foreclosures has almost doubled sales activity for most of this year.

“In January the market was busy, and since that time, it’s gone a little haywire,” says Brad Snyder, an agent with ZipRealty in Las Vegas. “There’s (sales) activity now that we haven’t seen even since ‘04.”

The situation is similar in California’s Riverside, San Joaquin and San Bernardino counties, where one out of every 14 homes was in foreclosure.

After falling 18 percent in the second half of 2008, monthly home prices were flat in the first half of this year, on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Markets like these have seen a surge this year in all-cash buyers, many of them investors, scooping up the sharply discounted properties. It’s not uncommon to see multiple offers on a single property, and that’s helped slow the rate of price declines a little. The demand also has helped whittle down the inventory of homes for sale to the lowest level since the boom.

“We have seen such a steep decline in supply right now, that when a home comes on the market it’s first day there could be seven or eight or 10 people there in a matter of hours,” Snyder says.

To lure buyers away from foreclosures, homebuilders have slashed prices or are simply tearing down vacant homes. New home sales jumped almost 59 percent in the first half of the year, while construction in these grossly overbuilt markets slid 12 percent.

In the Pacific Northwest and states such as Utah, by contrast, housing markets are on a different timer than the rest of the West. Home sales and values held up better and longer while markets in the Southwest were already in decline. These markets also haven’t seen as many foreclosures wreaking havoc with home prices.

States in the region: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming

Data compares June vs. January and June 2008:

Home resales: down 1 percent, up 12 percent

Median price: $214,800, flat, down 25 percent

New home sales: up 59 percent, down 10 percent

New home construction: down 12 percent, down 42 percent

Mortgage delinquencies as of March: 12 percent

Regional outlook: The recession remains the region’s wild card. Unemployment is at 10.2 percent in the West, but that could go higher if the economy worsens. If that happens, expect more foreclosures and a slower turnaround.

July 7, 2009

Buyer’s Remorse Hits Vegas Project

Filed under: Las Vegas — Matt G @ 7:41 pm

One of the costliest and highest-profile condominium developments in the country — the $8.4 billion City Center project in Las Vegas — is facing a revolt from some early buyers.

Some buyers who signed contracts are demanding significant price reductions, and have hired a law firm to take their grievances to the project’s principal developer, gambling company MGM Mirage. Others want their deposits back. Some are using a Web site, citycentercondodepositgroup.blogspot.com, to air their grievances.

So far, buyers have put down $313 million in deposits on 1,500 units in the 2,440-unit complex. Those who agreed to buy early on now fear they will take possession of condos whose market values are far below what they agreed to pay. Many of the contracts were signed in 2006 and 2007, when Vegas was booming.
city center condos las vegas
The City Center project under construction in Las Vegas.

“It is simply not possible by any stretch of the imagination to close on the units at the contracted price,” said Mark Connot, a partner with Hutchinson & Steffen, a Las Vegas law firm hired to represent a handful of buyers demanding price reductions. “Our position is they need to adjust the price to market value. And until that’s done I don’t think they will find any buyers.”

MGM Mirage said it isn’t offering discounts to current buyers, many of whom bought during a special promotion period for “friends and family” of MGM Mirage. A spokesman said it is too early to know how the units are valued in the current market. In Las Vegas, home-sale prices are down more than 30% from a year earlier.

The rising discontent is the latest sign of trouble to hit City Center, the colossus owned by MGM Mirage and Dubai World, the investment arm of the Persian Gulf state. The project narrowly avoided bankruptcy earlier this year, and the partners only recently resolved an internal legal feud.

The 67-acre project, due to open in November, includes 5,000 hotel rooms and 2,440 condos rising in sleek towers over the Las Vegas Strip. The development will have a public parks system, its own monorail, fire department, mall and theater.

“What we’re doing is evaluating the market,” said MGM Mirage Chief Executive Jim Murren, who put deposits down on two City Center condos. He added that he understands buyers “want clarity in an environment of uncertainty. In fact, that’s what I want as an owner.”

The City Center condos range in price from $600,000 for a smaller studio unit to more than $9 million for an expansive penthouse suite built atop of the Mandarin Oriental hotel. So far, the most expensive unit under contract is a 3,910-square-foot suite at the Mandarin for $9.4 million, or $2,392 per square foot.
las vegas condos on strip

It is unclear how many buyers are agitating for better deals or for deposit refunds, but real-estate analysts in the area have raised fears that a good portion of them may no longer be able to secure financing and could just decide to walk away, leaving their units empty.

How the dispute plays out has serious implications for the Las Vegas real-estate market.

“City Center is vital to everything we want to see happen in Vegas in the future,” said Dennis Smith, president of Home Builders Research Inc., a consultancy firm in Las Vegas. “It will change the Strip. We don’t want to see thousands of empty condo units sitting there.”

The City Center units are the most expensive of the 7,000 luxury condos for sale or under construction in the Las Vegas area.

Complicating matters, many of the first to sign contracts were the company’s biggest spending gamblers and its own executives who were enticed by the project’s “friends and family” promotion. In addition to Mr. Murren, MGM Mirage shareholder Kirk Kerkorian is among the early condo buyers.

“You have 1,500 condo buyers right now who wish they’d never put this thing into contract and most of them have some kind of relationship with MGM Mirage,” said one buyer who put a $600,000 deposit on a $3 million unit, and would like to get his deposit back. “It’s tricky for MGM Mirage. You make your best customers angry.”

Write to Tamara Audi at tammy.audi@wsj.com
Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page B1

August 15, 2008

$519000 LUXURIOUS PANORAMA TOWERS CONDO-OWNER WILL FINANCE (LAS VEGAS)

Filed under: Las Vegas — Matt G @ 5:36 pm

Wake up to panoramic views of Vegas from the 20th floor! 2 Bed 2 Bath Las Vegas tower residence, fabulous views of the almost finished City Center with balcony overlooking The Strip. Immaculate unit, almost 1100 s.f., built with contemporary accents, cherry wood cabinets, stainless steel appliances, marble flooring, and granite counter tops. Your residence includes his and her spa facility, racquetball, fitness room, limo service, concierge, valet and assigned garage parking, movie theater, recreation room/conference center, security gating, pool and Jacuzzi, and storage facility. Also, soon to be finished retail shopping units contiguous to the lower levels. NO BANK QUALIFYING. Owner will carry with 20% down. No agents please. (Inquiries from agents with buyers only).


Dean Martin Drive at Harmon
http://www.panoramatowers.com/
Contact matt@vipbazaar.com

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