by Calculated Risk on 7/02/2008 06:10:00 PM
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Ghost Towns in the Inland Empire
Peter Viles at the L.A. Times provides some excerpts from an analyst report: Analyst sees 'ghost town' in Inland Empire
"At several properties, there were a significant number of fully built homes sitting vacant along with a large number of additional homes still under construction," Sandler O'Neill & Partners analyst Aaron Deer wrote today after touring developments in Corona and Ontario. "At one master plan community, the entire development appeared to be vacant -- with the exception of crews working on new construction, it was a ghost town."These remotes areas are getting crushed. Not only are house prices falling in general, but in areas like the Inland Empire a large percentage of homeowners worked in real estate (construction, mortgage brokers, real estate agents, etc.), so the unemployment rate is rising faster than for other areas. Add in almost $5 per gallon gasoline, and that makes these areas uneconomical, especially for people with large SUVs and trucks (like construction workers).
...
"Perhaps the most interesting aspect to the development was what it revealed about the nature of the housing boom: that at the peak even the most undesirable and remote locations were worthy of expensive, high-end homes."