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REAL ESTATE: Housing analyst predicts increase in sales, median price in the
coming year

More sales, higher prices projected in coming year

February 05, 2010 -
New-home sales in
Las Vegas are projected to increase to about 5,400 in 2010 and the median price
should be close to $220,000 by the end of the year, a slight bump from
December's median of $216,000, housing analyst Dennis Smith said Thursday.

The president of Las Vegas-based Home Builders Research reported his year-end
data and 2010 projections in his first housing webinar, which replaces his
annual housing outlook previously held at various locations around the city.

New-home prices fell 13.2 percent in 2009 and are down from a high of $330,900
in 2006.

"I think we're going to see a slight increase," Smith said. "I'm not saying
we'll see a huge jump, but by the end of the year, I think we'll be looking at
closer to $220,000 than $210,000. The only thing that could change this is a
flood of (foreclosure) inventory, the 'silent inventory' everybody talks about."

Las Vegas has the fifth-highest foreclosure rate in the nation with one out of
119 households in some stage of foreclosure filing, according to Irvine,
Calif.-based RealtyTrac.com.

Bank of America plans to release about 500 foreclosure homes a month in Nevada,
and that's OK, Smith said. The market can absorb those.

"We've been hearing about this for over a year and it hasn't happened yet. I
don't hear that banks are dumping a bunch of foreclosures on the market.
Obviously, that could change. My best guess is the number of foreclosures will
remain manageable as far as affecting prices," said Smith, who's been tracking
the Las Vegas housing market for 22 years.

He's projecting about 45,000 resales this year, nearly identical to the 44,885
recorded resales he counted in 2009. The median price for resales will edge up
3.3 percent to $127,000 in 2010 and climb another 5.6 percent in 2011 to
$134,000, based on a stable inventory of 8,500 homes on the market.

Las Vegas Realtor Steve Hawks said he respectfully disagrees with the analyst's
forecast.

"No way prices are going up," Hawks said. "Interest rates are going up, which
will cause the average person to qualify for less home, which means sellers have
to lower prices. And the new FHA (Federal Housing Authority) guidelines are
knocking out about half of the FHA buyers that were looking in '09, and then job
losses from government agencies start to hit this year with the budget cuts. But
the good news is sales volume should be just as high as '09."

One of the key housing indicators is building permits, which decreased 37
percent to 3,850 in 2009. However, they steadily rose from a low of 179 in
January 2009 to 355 in December. Permits were running around 20,000 a year in
the late 1990s and peaked at 32,879 in 2004.

Smith said he's fairly confident permits will increase by about 500 this year
and climb above 5,000 in 2011.

"We've got other builders re-entering the market and the local builders that
went away... I called it hibernating... they're ready to get back in the
picture," he said.

When will permits get back to 20,000?

"I don't know when we'll get to 10,000," Smith said. "I don't see a lot of
speculative building out there that would create more standing inventory. If the
smaller and private builders are having a hard time finding financing, it'll be
a long time before they're overbuilding again in Las Vegas."

John Restrepo of Restrepo Consulting Group said Las Vegas has unfortunately been
one of the hardest-hit housing markets and is lagging the national recovery.

He's concerned about a Credit Suisse report showing quite a boost in the number
of Alt-A and option ARMs, or adjustable-rate mortgages, due to reset this year
and into 2011.

"We haven't seen the full ramification of that," Restrepo said. "Try to
refinance? Maybe they can't because of declining values. That has an effect on
consumer confidence and that's important to us."
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