by Calculated Risk on 2/06/2019 10:57:00 AM
Wednesday, February 06, 2019
Las Vegas Real Estate in January: Sales Down 18% YoY, Inventory up 106% YoY
This is a key former distressed market to follow since Las Vegas saw the largest price decline, following the housing bubble, of any of the Case-Shiller composite 20 cities.
The Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors reported Southern Nevada home prices bounce back to $300,000; GLVAR housing statistics for January 2019
Local home prices bounced back to the $300,000 mark for the first time since September while fewer properties changed hands and more homes were on the market than one year ago. So says a report released Wednesday by the Greater Las Vegas Association of REALTORS® (GLVAR) covering activity in the local housing market through January.1) Overall sales were down 18% year-over-year from 2,812 in January 2018 to 2,305 in January 2019.
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The total number of existing local homes, condos and townhomes sold during January was 2,305. Compared to one year ago, January sales were down 19.4 percent for homes and down 12.5 percent for condos and townhomes. GLVAR reported a total of 42,876 property sales in 2018, down from 45,388 in all of 2017, so Carpenter expects sales numbers may continue to slip this year.
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With nearly a four-month supply of homes now available for sale, she said the number of local homes listed for sale without offers on them has been increasing for several months. However, she said that is still below what would normally be considered a balanced market. By the end of January, GLVAR reported 7,254 single-family homes listed for sale without any sort of offer. That’s up 95.1 percent from one year ago. For condos and townhomes, the 1,703 properties listed without offers in January represented a 168.6 percent jump from one year ago.
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The number of so-called distressed sales also continues to drop each year. GLVAR reported that short sales and foreclosures combined accounted for just 2.8 percent of all existing local property sales in January. That’s down from 4.3 percent of all sales one year ago and 11 percent two years ago.
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2) Active inventory (single-family and condos) is up sharply from a year ago, from a total of 4,352 in January 2018 to 8,957 in January 2019. Note: Total inventory was up 106% year-over-year. This is a significant increase in inventory, although months-of-supply is still somewhat low.
3) Fewer distressed sales.