"Residents
Should Not Panic": Thousands Of Las Vegas Homes Get ZERO Offers
For November
17
December, 2018
New
data published by the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors shows
10,000 single-family homes were on the market and by the end of
November, 7,000
of those homes had zero
offers, up 54% compared
to 2017 and the highest number of homes in Las Vegas Valley to
not get a bid in more than two years.
Realtors
are warning Las
Vegas residents that they should not panic.
It
is becoming increasingly clear that the
real estate market is at a turning point, in one of the
most overvalued markets
in the country.
"I mean that's still crazy fast for markets across this country,” said Nevada Realtors newly elected president, Keith Lynam.“Are we as fast as were six months ago? No, but we couldn't sustain that, it was not sustainable, it was never going to be sustainable. So we're back to pretty much a normal market."
Lynam
has recognized the shift in the market and suggested a slowdown
in the quarters ahead: He predicts homes will now average
four to six months on the market into 2019. Before, Lynam said
homes were on the market between 2.5 to 3 weeks.
While
thousands of homes are going no bid in November, some homes are still
selling, but not as often as they used to, a sign that the
housing market is headed for trouble. Buyers acquired about
2,300 houses in November, down 12% from November 2017,
the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors (GLVAR) reported.
The
pullback in demand could be linked to fast-rising home
prices, higher borrowing costs, and an affordability crisis.
Home
prices were up "13.5% year-over-year in September, more than
double the national rate," according
to the latest S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller
index. Nevada's growth rate was the fastest among
all other cities in the CoreLogic Case-Shiller index for
the fourth straight month, a move that is not sustainable.
In
the last several months, sellers have responded with more price
cuts.
This
is right in line to Bank
of America's forecast in September: Existing
home sales have peaked, reflecting declining affordability, greater
price reductions and deteriorating housing sentiment.
This
year's housing market slowdown has hit the hottest markets like
San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Denver, and New York City.
The
slowdown is now spreading into less expensive markets—Tampa,
Philadelphia, Phoenix, and Las Vegas.
Las Vegas was “the poster child of the housing crash in 2008,” said Vivek Sah, director of the LIED Institute for Real Estate Studies at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
“There are some buyers who are not pulling the trigger because of that.”
The
deceleration in less expensive housing markets like Las
Vegas, suggests that the slowdown is now broad base and the
entire US economy is headed for trouble in 2019.
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