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Las Vegas new-home market kicks off 2020 with strong start

The Las Vegas new-home market closed February with its strongest week of net sales in years, and a leading housing analyst said prospective buyers haven’t slowed down in checking out model homes through early March as builders target buyers with new projects with lower prices.

Home Builders Research reported new home closings rose 21 percent in January and builders are seizing on the opportunity by taking out 1,083 permits, a 10 percent gain over January 2019. That’s the highest January permit total since 2007 when there were 1,158.

The 742 closings in January was 131 more than January 2019 and most since 881 in January 2008. There were 588 single-family closings — up 11.6 percent — and a big jump in town homes and other attached products at 154, which is 83 percent higher than January 2019. Town homes reached a 20 percent share of home closings for the second consecutive month.

Numbers for February closings haven’t been finalized, but Smith said it will be a strong month. There were 1,136 net sales in February — sales minus cancellations — which is 42 percent higher than February 2019 and the highest February since 2007. Net sales for January and February were up 34 percent combined over 2019.

The firm reported there were 322 net sales during the last week of February that ended March 1. In search looking back to 2015, that’s the best week over that period. The next highest was 293 in January 2018.

“It’s extremely early to do such things, but if we look at January’s relationship to the annual total historically, 2020 is on pace to see somewhere between 11,000 and 13,000 new home closings,” said Home Builders Research President Andrew Smith. There were just under 10,500 in 2019 and 10,673 closings in 2018.

Smith said there’s no evidence the coronavirus outbreak that’s now spreading across the U.S. and in Nevada has impacted the Las Vegas housing market so far in terms of sales or traffic through builder communities. He cited how some analysts are worried the impact it will have on the nation and region’s economy given business conferences are cancelled and how is is changing people’s spending habits by going out less and doing social distancing. It’s all unprecedented and happening fast, he said.

“What we will say pertaining to the local housing market is that there is little doubt that any sort of widespread outbreak in the valley and perhaps even not so widespread will affect every part of the local economy,” Smith said. “Even barring any official closures or restrictions on movement, it’s probably safe to assume that many may begin self-imposed restrictions on face-to-face interactions and forays out into the general public. Las Vegas is already seeing this sort of thing on a larger scale with the numerous business meetings and conventions being postponed or canceled all together.”

Nat Hodgson, CEO of the Southern Nevada Home Builders Association, said, however, he hasn’t heard of any disruptions or lower traffic counts from builders so far.

Smith said the homebuying process could be “severely affected” if the overall economy is impacted.

Given the “incredible sales numbers” seen thus far in 2020, Smith said no one wants to see a slowdown and none has been visible at this time.

“That momentum has continued into 2020 and has even increased to a level not seen in January for many years in Southern Nevada,” Smith said. “Tensions and fears have been ramping up in society for a few weeks now, which has led to some analysts suggesting a possible slowdown of the housing market. Here in the Las Vegas area, however, we have not observed this as of yet. In fact, it has been quite the opposite.”

As for 2020 so far, Smith said, Las Vegas has gotten off to a good start over 2019 because of lower mortgage rates compared to a year ago at this time. The housing market picked up during the spring of 2019 and that carried through into 2020, he said.

In analyzing numbers dating to 1999, January had the eighth highest average net sales of any given year, Smith said. The 1,116 new home net sales in January were 27 percent higher than in 2019 and the highest January total since 2007 when it was 1,191. That’s more than four combined Januarys from 2009 through 2012, Smith said.

The buyer traffic in January was 8.6 percent higher than 2019, Smith said. Cancellations were even with last year, which Smith said shows homebuilders are having success attracting qualified buyers and converting them into sales.

Builders attract buyers with lower prices

There were 16 new projects in January, which is the same as January 2019, Smith said. The big difference is those new projects had an average asking price of $527,137 a year ago but in 2020 it was $370,104 or 30 percent less, Smith said.

The median price of single-family homes closed in January was $377,543, a 4.1 percent decline from January 2019. The $291,586 median price for town homes was 10.1 percent higher than January 2019.

“Given all of the rhetoric about affordable housing, it may surprise some to see that over 60 percent of the new homes closed in January were under $400,000,” Smith said.

Smith said the trendline shows the market has changed over the last six-plus years in what builders were offering to generate revenue given the market conditions and buyer preferences. From 2014 to 2018, builders dealt with higher land prices by building bigger and better homes, he said.

“Then at a certain point it was realized that while larger homes can generate better profits, they also take up more space,” Smith said. “They are probably not the best option in an area where large chunks of developable land are becoming ever more scarce.”

Builders attacked the problem with higher density, allowing buyers to afford smaller and lower-priced homes, Smith said.

That construction along with town homes would have brought down prices tracked but a growth in high-end new homes kept the average base price elevated, Smith said.

“In January of 2014, there were a total of three active plans with a base asking price greater than $749,999,” Smith said. “In January 2020, there were 88 — an increase of nearly 3,000 percent.”

Smith said he doesn’t expect the January permit total of 1,083 to keep pace the rest of the year. The highest January record is 2004 when there were 2,648 permits.

The early pace for the 2020 permits is about 14,000, but Smith said that is unlikely.

“We really can’t see that coming to fruition, if for no other reason than the builders and their subcontractors likely do not have the capacity to handle that type of an increase in activity,” Smith said.

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