Odds and Ends
Because Vegas has lost jobs over the last year, our population is down. And that in turn has caused apartment vacancy rates to rise and rents have dropped to 2006 levels.
Economist and real estate expert Robert Shiller (whose name you may recall from the Case-Shiller index) says that real estate prices will continue to drop “for some time.” Please remember that he is speaking about a nationwide trend, not particularly about any specific real estate market.
Important news for our do-it-yourself crowd! If your home is in an unincorporated section of Clark County (NV) and perhaps you’ve forgotten to pull a permit on a home project, you can still make your upgrades perfectly legal and avoid penalties through a permit amnesty program. Contact the county right away, because this program won’t last long. If you are in Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, or Henderson, you will still have to deal with the city permit office.
In News of the Obvious, someone points out that the real estate market won’t really get better nationwide until we have better job creation numbers. Since it’s been months since jobs were really created in this nation, and we spent most of the first half of the decade not making as many new jobs as were really needed, it may take a while to catch up.
A bad economy, lost jobs, and lost real estate values have created a situation where foreclosure is now no longer a sub-prime problem. Nor is the problem just in residential real estate any more: commericial defauls are at a 17 year high.
Here in Nevada, our legislature passed a bill to require mediation in some foreclosure actions. The rules for these mediation sessions are currently being written by our courts. I predict that most homeowners trying to force mediation will discover that large multi-state banks are federally regulated, and banks will claim they are exempt from this state requirement. The truth is there is very little state regulators and courts can do to them.
New rules that were supposed to make appraisals more uniform and less subject to influence by Realtors and lenders are actually making things worse.
And last, a bit of humor — Squat 2 Own Realty. I do NOT advocate any of the methods described! It’s strictly meant as humor. On a serious note, pay attention when viewing “vacant” homes, because they are a target for real life squatters.
June 10th, 2009 at 3:34 pm
[...] Original post by Bridget Magnus [...]