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The
Risky Vegas Market
by
Doug French
by Doug French
Countrywide
Mortgage CEO Angelo Mozilo believes that the "housing market
officially turned south in January," according to Banc Investment
Daily, and that some overheated markets may see prices plunge by
up to 40 percent. Mozilo mentioned Las Vegas as one of those risky
markets.
But
nary a discouraging word was spoken at the Las Vegas Annual Housing
Outlook hosted by local title company sales representative Richard
Lee and Dennis Smith of Home Builders Research, held last week at
the Las Vegas Convention Center. Close to 1300 attended, hanging
on every word as to what is happening and what will happen with
the Las Vegas housing market.
After
last year’s record number of closings that fell just short of 39,000,
Smith expects the market to rebound in the second half of this year
and finish with closings near last year’s record number. But the
market will need to improve greatly. According to Smith, new subdivision
traffic count is down 20 percent in the first eight weeks of this
year and net sales per subdivision are down 24 percent.
But
builders I talked to at the Outlook don’t believe Smith’s numbers.
They say their traffic numbers are half what they were last year
and cancellations are soaring, with the primary reason being potential
homebuyers can’t qualify with the higher mortgage rates. Buyers
who can qualify are able to play competing homebuilders against
each other for free options and upgrades.
Smith
told the Outlook crowd that more cancellations don’t bother him.
"Historically, [builders] told their sales people if you don't have
a cancellation rate over 20 percent, you're not selling enough homes,"
he said. That’s easy for him to say, he’s selling reports, not houses.
Builders
who have completed houses to unload and the clock ticking on fully
disbursed construction loans are evidently bothered. According to
one commercial appraiser I spoke with, there is at least one Las
Vegas builder with standing inventory that is offering eight per
cent commissions to outside realtors who bring buyers to their project.
Two years ago, outside realtors were persona non grata at
new home subdivisions.
One
builder with a project in the busy southwest confided that he dropped
his prices $20,000 per unit to compete with the handful of large
publicly traded builders that have projects surrounding his. Unfortunately,
that move just prompted the big builders to drop prices more. He
described competing in that market area as a "bloodbath."
Even
the resale market is soft. "You won’t be able to get that much
for your house," a young realtor with three phones attached
to his belt told his buddy in the locker room at the gym the other
day, "it’s a buyers’ market." It wasn’t that long ago
gym rats were bragging about having a dozen new homes in escrow
that they intended to flip, making "stupid money" before
construction was complete.
But
Mozilo’s prediction of a 40 percent price crash in Las Vegas seems
unlikely. Just short of 7,000 people move to Las Vegas each month.
Job growth was up seven per cent in 2005. The unemployment rate
was only 3.5 percent in December, and as Richard Lee points out,
building cranes abound on the Strip and beyond. In the 15 years
between the opening of Steve Wynn’s Mirage in 1990 and the Wynn
Hotel and Casino, which opened last year, $15 billion was invested
on the Strip. During that time there were never more than 23 cranes
in the air at any one time, according to Lee. Currently, 38 cranes
dot the skyline and over $25 billion worth of projects are in progress
or considered imminent.
Lee
told the Outlook crowd the often-repeated Las Vegas investment wisdom
preached by local old-timers: "if there is one crane in the
air, buy a couple houses, if there are two cranes, buy some land,
and if there are four or five cranes, buy anything!" Given
the current housing market softness, now doesn’t seem the time to
"buy anything," but those who have followed that advice
in the past have made fortunes.
Over-building
in Las Vegas is difficult given that the supply of residential land
remaining inside the BLM disposal area is only 60,279 acres
a less than ten-year supply and the shortage of qualified
labor. "It's a situation that nobody predicted. The No. 1 problem
is construction costs and lack of skilled labor," Richard Lee recently
told the Las Vegas Review Journal.
Deutsche
Bank recently completed a study that suggested that MGM Mirage's
$7 billion Project CityCenter alone could use more than half of
the licensed subcontractors in Las Vegas and the chairman of large
building contractor Perini, told Wall Street analysts and investors
in a recent conference call that the limited number of trade workers,
general contractors and subcontractors limits the growth in Las
Vegas for now.
"You're
competing against a billion-dollar monstrosity," Jim Stuart, co-founder
of Centra Properties and a partner with actor George Clooney in
the planned Las Ramblas condo project told the Review Journal. "The
gaming giants can afford to play in this market and anybody other
than the three or four biggest companies in town have tremendous
pricing issues to deal with."
While
gaming companies demand more labor and materials for construction
on the Strip, the increasing barriers to entry in the suburban Las
Vegas housing business will keep the major homebuilders gaining
market share, keeping prices higher than a more competitive market
would. Last year the top ten builders closed 61 per cent of new
home sales (excluding condo conversions). A decade ago, 179 different
builders sold less than 20,000 homes in the Las Vegas market. Last
year only 97 builders remained to close nearly twice that amount.
This market power by the big builders will only increase as labor
continues to be in short supply, land prices remain high, and entitlement
processes at the various municipalities elongated.
Billions
of dollars are being invested in Las Vegas to provide aging Baby
Boomers and Gen-Xer’s a place to go and gamble away their retirement
money. Gaming executives know that Americans love to drink, gamble
and party when times are good, and especially when times are bad.
Wagering on a housing crash in Las Vegas is likely a bad bet.
March
6, 2006
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He is the 2005 recipient of the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the
Center for Libertarian Studies. This is a talk given at the LRC
Conference on Gold, Freedom, and Peace.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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