Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Midyear real-estate report says gains in home values abound

By HUBBLE SMITH

Sep. 04, 2007
Las Vegas Review-Journal

To hear people whine about the Las Vegas housing market, you'd think they were cats taking a bath.

Sure, home prices have receded from their all-time peak, which was just a year ago and followed a period of blistering appreciation. Las Vegas led the nation with quarterly appreciation of 40 percent and 50 percent in 2004.

Increased housing demand from mid-2003 through 2005 resulted in record numbers in both the new and resale home market, Coldwell Banker Premier Realty President Bob Hamrick said.

The market has backed off, but the gains remain, he said.

Nine ZIP codes in Las Vegas Valley with depreciating home values in 2006 show net gains of anywhere from 9 percent to 81 percent since 2003, according to a midyear report from Coldwell Banker Premier Realty.

One sample neighborhood gained 16 percent in 2003, 45 percent in 2004 and 13 percent in 2005, appreciating more in three years than it would have in 20 years by historical standards.

Before 1999, Las Vegas was among the slower U.S. housing markets with annual appreciation of 1 percent to 4 percent. That's what made it one of the best housing values in the nation. Homes in master-planned Summerlin were selling for $66 a square foot at a time when a comparable home in Phoenix was selling for $115 to $120 a square foot.

Giving back 1 percent last year is a drop in the bucket, Hamrick said.

"Few of us would pass on a stock market investment with a three-year return on investment of 73 percent," he said. "With the onslaught of negative press, many of us have forgotten about these record-breaking gains."

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