Monday, February 22, 2010

Foreclosure inventory bolsters sales of existing homes

Feb. 21, 2010
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

REAL ESTATE: Home prices down in all ZIP codes in 2009

Foreclosure inventory bolsters sales of existing homes

By HUBBLE SMITH
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

From affluent suburbs to inner-city neighborhoods, no part of Las Vegas was left unscathed by the precipitous drop in home values last year.
Some suffered more than others, but everybody lost ground.
Overall, the 12-month median price for an existing home in Las Vegas fell 38 percent in 2009 to $128,108, the firm reported. The average ZIP code drop was 23 percent and prices have fallen just 4 percent since April, bouncing between $125,000 and $120,000.
I think we're tremendously undervalued right now," SalesTraq President Larry Murphy said. "One reason I say that is because you can't replicate a home today for what you can buy it for. Nobody's going to build a home if they can't get their money out of it. That's why nobody's building.
New-home sales in Las Vegas hit a 24-year low in 2009 with 5,184 closings, a 48 percent decrease from the previous year. Residential building permits fell 32 percent to 3,766, SalesTraq reported.
Anyone who looks at a graph of where existing-home prices have gone in Las Vegas over the past 10 years can see how the market might be construed as undervalued, Murphy said. Prices peaked at $285,000 in 2006 and then dropped to $120,000 in August.

Again, intuitively, if you look at this graph, a 10-year history of prices, you tell me if something in your gut doesn't tell you it's undervalued today," he said. "But I could be wrong. We all missed obvious signs of the bubble itself and I'm at the center of it.

Somebody must see value. Sales of existing homes jumped 57 percent to 48,075 in 2009, much of it investor-driven by deals on foreclosed homes. About three-fourths of the sales were foreclosures with a median price around $116,000 and roughly 40 percent were cash transactions.

That's another reason Murphy says homes are undervalued. Cash flow on rental homes is strongly positive, he said. A savings account or certificate of deposit on $150,000 might yield $1,500 a year, or $125 a month. Buying a house for $150,000 and renting it for $1,000 a month brings in $12,000 a year.

True, there are maintenance costs and property taxes on the rental home, but $1,500 versus $12,000: "Which do you prefer?" Murphy asked. In the 1980s, investors were happy to break even on a rental home while deducting interest and taxes, he said. Maybe they'd make a decent profit if they held it for four or five years and then sold.
Realtor Rob Jenson said home prices are "unbelievably low." Many homes are selling for well below replacement costs in all sectors of the market.
Pricing bottoms are clear when looking at sales in specific neighborhoods, Jenson said. He sold two homes in January in The Ridges at the edge of Red Rock Canyon for $500 a square foot.
"When I look at comps (comparable sales), I look at a price that will move," he said. "One of the homes was $1 million and the other was $900,000. When I met with them, I told the million-dollar homeowner we might get $700,000 and the $900,000 home, not as upgraded, might get $650,000.
"Prices aren't coming down, they're already down and sellers are in denial. It's very hard for a seller to be objective about the price of their home because it's their last chance to get something back on their investment. Either sell it, rent it or take it off the market," Jenson said.
Murphy thinks 2010 will be much like 2006 when home prices ended the year about where they started. The median will fluctuate between $120,000 and $125,000 this year, equal to price levels of 10 years ago, he said.
Marta Borsanyi, principal of Newport Beach, Calif.-based Concord Group, said housing prices are bottoming out in Las Vegas, but a full recovery in the housing market won't occur until first quarter 2012. She defines full recovery as three to four new-home sales a month in each new subdivision and low
REO rates in Las Vegas and Phoenix continued their upward trend, albeit at a slower rate, with 17.4 and 12.2 REOs, respectively, per 1,000 properties.
Banks foreclosed on about 26,000 homes in Las Vegas last year, and Murphy is predicting the same amount this year. The top foreclosure ZIP code was 89131 in northwest Las Vegas with 1,167 homes taken back by the bank.
Although some experts have been predicting a second wave of foreclosures for more than a year, Murphy is sticking by his 26,000 estimate.
"I don't disagree that we'll see more people get notices (of default) than last year, but the outcome will be different," the local housing analyst said.

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

January home sales soar as prices continue slide

January home sales soar as prices continue slide

Realtors sold 2,608 single-family homes in Las Vegas during January, a 17.3 percent increase from the same month a year ago, the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors reported Tuesday.
The median price dropped 15.7 percent from a year ago to $134,925, though it's down only 0.8 percent from the previous month.
Inventory decreased 10 percent from a year ago to 19,742 listings. Taking out pending and contingent sales, or homes that are under contract, the number is reduced to 8,107 available units.
The beginning of the year is looking a lot like the end of 2009, with home prices in double-digit decline from year-ago figures and sales posting double-digit gains.
One of the more promising trends in January was the continued increase in short sales and a decrease in sales involving foreclosed homes, Realtors association president Rick Shelton said.
In January, 21.1 percent of all existing homes sold were short sales.
"This suggests that lenders are more willing to work with homeowners and work out short sales as an alternative to foreclosing on homes," Shelton said.
At the same time, bank-owned homes accounted for a decreasing percentage of home sales, dropping to 57.4 percent in January from 60.1 percent in December.
The number of local homes purchased with cash during January rose to 45.5 percent, the highest such percentage ever tracked by the association.
Rob Jenson of The Jenson Group said the average sales price found a new floor at $156,385 in January, sliding 2.3 percent from the previous month.
The Realtors association reported 658 sales of condos and townhomes in January, an increase of nearly 50 percent from a year earlier. The median price is $69,000, up 5.7 percent from December and down 13.8 percent from a year ago.
By HUBBLE SMITH
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

Saturday, January 9, 2010

What is REO

What is REO

An REO (Real Estate Owned) is a property that goes back to the mortgage company after an unsuccessful foreclosure auction. You see, most foreclosure auctions do not even result in bids. After all, if there was enough equity in the property to satisfy the loan, the owner would have probably sold the property and paid off the bank. That is why the property ends up at a foreclosure or trustee sale.

REO Properties For Sale

The bank now owns the property and the mortgage loan no longer exists. The bank will handle the eviction, if necessary, and may do some repairs. They will negotiate with the IRS for removal of tax liens and pay off any homeowner’s association dues. As a purchaser of an REO property, the buyer will receive a title insurance policy and the opportunity to investigate the property.
Make sure that the price you pay (if you’re successful) is comparable to other homes in the neighborhood.

How Banks Sell REO's

Each bank/lender works a little differently, but they all have similar goals. They want to get the best price possible and have no interest in "dumping" real estate cheaply. Generally, banks have an entire department set up to manage their REO inventory.
Once you make an offer to purchase, banks generally present a "counter-offer." It may be at a higher price than you expect, but they have to demonstrate to investors, shareholders and auditors that they attempted to get the highest price possible. You should plan to counter the counter-offer.
Your offer or counter-offer will probably have to be reviewed and approved by several individuals and companies. Even once an offer is accepted, the bank may insert wording like “..subject to corporate approval with 5 days."

Property Condition

Banks always want to sell a property in "as is" condition. Most will provide a Section 1 pest certification, but not unless you include it in your offer and negotiate the point. They will allow you to get all the inspections you want (at your expense), but they may not agree to do any repairs.
Your offer should include an inspection contingency period that allows you to terminate the sale if the inspections reveal unanticipated damages that the bank will not correct.
Even though you agreed to “as is," always give the bank another opportunity to make repairs or give you a credit after you’ve completed your inspections. Sometimes they’ll re-negotiate to save the transaction instead of putting the property back on the market, but don’t take it for granted.
Banks do not want to see a lot of proprietary disclosures; they are exempt from the California Seller’s Transfer Disclosure Statement (TDS-14). If there are real estate agents involved, either representing you or the bank, those agents are required to provide you their disclosure statements.
Most banks will not provide financing on their REOs but it doesn’t hurt to ask. Especially if the property has extensive damage and you are purchasing it "as is."

Making an Offer

Offers are usually FAXED to the bank. The listing agent needs your originals. There is no formal presentation. Keep in mind: nothing happens evenings and weekends (banks are closed)
Since there is no face-to-face presentation to the bank, provide the listing agent with a pre-qualification or better yet, a pre-approval letter and buyer biography. Make your offer easy to accept.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Home sales up 64 percent last year in Las Vegas

Home sales up 64 percent last year in Las Vegas

By Brian Wargo

The Southern Nevada housing market showed signs of recovery in 2009 by recording the second-highest number of home sales in the region’s history.
The 46,879 sales of single-family homes, condos and townhomes through the Multiple Listing Service was 64 percent higher than the 28,618 in 2008, according to statistics released this morning by the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors.
“It is a good sign, but it is just a number and doesn’t reflect the whole picture of what needs to happen,” said Dennis Smith, president of Home Builders Research and Southern Nevada housing analyst.
The number of sales in 2009 was second to the 71,963 in 2004 when investors started to flood the market to flip homes.
No one is saying that’s the case this time with demand driven by first-time homebuyers taking advantage of lower prices and an $8,000 tax credit, and investors who have a long-term focus of making income from rentals.
The rebound in home sales in 2009 is quite a contrast to 2009 when only 18,555 units were sold in Southern Nevada. The GLVAR statistics include Las Vegas, Pahrump, Mesquite and Laughlin and are primarily comprised of existing homes, which make up the bulk of the MLS.
“Anything that depletes the inventory is a good sign in my eyes,” Smith said. “It will just make things turn that much quicker. The sales have helped prices stabilize.”
In December, the GLVAR reported the 3,420 sales of existing homes was 10 percent higher than November and 37 percent higher than December 2008. The median price of homes sold, however, fell $4,000 or 3 nearly percent to $136,000.
The median price of condominiums and townhomes fell 4 percent to $65,300 even though sales rose 7 percent from November to 776. Those sales were up 71 percent from December 2008, the GLVAR reported.
New GLVAR President said the decade that just ended was a roller coaster ride for Las Vegas. He admitted it’s been a challenging time for the housing market and economy as a whole.
The GLVAR reported the percentage of homes bought with cash during December was 40.4 percent. About 60 percent of the homes sold in December were bank-owned but that percentage declined in the last half of 2009 because of a dwindling supply of inventory, officials said.
The GLVAR reported there were 19,707 homes listed at the end of December, a 5.5 percent decline from November and 11 percent below its mark in December 2008. Of that total, there were 8,405 units listed without offers.
As for the condo and townhome market, there were 4,576 units available at the end of December, down 4.4 percent from November. There were 1,819 units listed without offers.