UNITED STATES NEWS

As Nevada housing brightens, some see storm coming

Jan 24, 2013, 11:50 PM

Associated Press

LAS VEGAS (AP) – In a state long defined by its stormy housing market, the sun is apparently peeking out from the clouds.

Nevada just ended its five-year reign as foreclosure king of the nation, relinquishing the title to Florida in 2012. Home prices shot up 24 percent in Las Vegas in one year, and buyers are in outright wars to get a piece of tight inventory that’s shriveled to a five-week supply.

Even the Nevada Association of Realtors is looking to retire the lengthy Face of Foreclosure report it’s published annually since 2009, saying the issue is no longer the big story in housing and the public is just plain sick of talking about it.

“Nevada’s ready to turn the page,” Joel Searby, a Florida-based analyst who produced the report, said in an interview. “In terms of what the data says, there’s no doubt that there’s been a downward trend that’s been steady since 2010.”

But amid the optimistic signs, troubling questions loom.

Most prominent among them: Has legislation aimed at stemming illegal foreclosures spurred real improvement, or simply created a bubble and delayed the inevitable?

Nobody is quite sure.

“It’s having an impact,” said Brian Gordon, an economist with Las Vegas firm Applied Analysis, about much-discussed Nevada law AB 284, “But it’s difficult to say how big.”

STATE LAW ONE OF MANY FORCES

In September 2011, initial foreclosure filings in Nevada totaled about 4,700, on par with a yearslong trend of thousands of such notices each month. In October 2011, the number of notices of default plummeted to about 1,200, according to Realtytrac.

Initial foreclosure notices have since crept up, reaching over 1,500 in December, according to Realtytrac, but they’ve never returned to their previous levels.

Many point to AB 284, an “anti-robo-signing” state law that took effect that month. It required lenders to show paperwork proving they had the legal right to a property before they could foreclose.

Proponents trumpet it as consumer protection. But to some Realtors, “The world came to an end” when the law took effect, said Keith Lynam of NVAR.

“There aren’t enough homes going on the market. That’s absolutely creating an artificial, temporary bubble,” said Victor Joecks of the Nevada Policy Research Institute, a conservative think tank that supports repealing the law.

Marcus Conklin, the former state assemblyman who carried the bill two years ago and recently lost re-election in a close, expensive race, said bringing the measure was the right thing to do. He suggested criticism was more about upsetting the businesses of people making a heyday selling the distressed homes.

“If your business is built around foreclosures,” he said, “you’re not happy when foreclosure rates go down.”

Lynam, Joecks and Conklin all say there’s more behind the market’s dramatic turn than the state law.

Lynam contends repealing it would make no difference because it mirrors language in federal rules. He says a more significant factor in the shift was a national, $25 billion mortgage settlement between state and federal governments and the five largest lenders in the country. The agreement, which was reached in February 2012 after months of negotiations, gives banks a financial incentive for reducing principals and allowing short sales and doesn’t give them credit for foreclosing.

“It’s such a mixed bag in how it’s affected the market,” Lynam said about AB 284. “People are somewhat myopic in their view of what’s happening.”

PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECT

But if the law isn’t the only thing to shift the market, it’s still had an effect.

“It sent out a mental shift to the homeowner _ `I’m going to sit here and kinda live rent-free,'” Lynam said.

Rocky Finseth, who lobbies for the Realtor association, recalled appearing on a radio talk show and fielding a call from a taxi driver who said he’d heard about the law and stopped paying his mortgage.

“We need to put the threat of foreclosure back into the picture,” Lynam said.

Making some changes to the law could encourage people who are still unable to pay their mortgage to short sell, move out, and move on with their lives, Lynam said.

It could also help put the state’s housing crisis in the rearview mirror more quickly.

“Our recovery cycle has been somewhat delayed … as individuals have been staying longer than they would have,” said Gordon, the economist. “It’s probably time for them to move on.”

AN IMPENDING FLOOD?

Critics have made enough noise about that bill that Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto has convened a working group of lawmakers and other stakeholders to publically discuss the rule.

“I’ve made it very clear that the intent here is to address people’s concerns, not for repealing it or watering down the strictures,” she said.

In a report released Thursday, Realtors made their own suggestions for how Nevada lawmakers can help in the housing recovery.

_ They want to define what constitutes “personal knowledge” of a loan’s history. Lynam says mortgages passed hands so quickly during the housing crisis that it’s nearly impossible to know who held it at all times, and says a looser definition would allow more legitimate foreclosures.

_ They want lawmakers to address abandoned properties in a way that could help banks and others restore them to a market already starved for inventory.

Conklin thinks such newly freed inventory would be unlikely to flood the market and sink prices. He says such a scenario would not be in the best interest of banks.

“There’s always some risk. But it’s not like it’s a storm,” Conklin said. “I think there’s a lot of strategy _ as more people demand homes, there’s more of a release of homes.”

And while Lynam says he expects prices will “soften” from current, inflated highs, they don’t expect a wave of foreclosures, either. Data shows the number of seriously delinquent properties is going down, Searby said, discounting worries of a widespread “shadow inventory” of properties on the brink.

Experts agree it’s a complicated calculus that depends on how banks make their decisions, whether the economy at large continues to improve, and whether the current, rabid appetite for Nevada housing is big enough to swallow up the new foreclosures and short sales expected to make their way

Most expect at least some pain along the way.

“When the bubble bursts, there’s going to be a fall,” said Joecks, of conservative NPRI.

He added: “Do we want to drag it out, or have some pain in the short term and experience recovery?”

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

United States News

This satellite image from Planet Labs PBC shows Iran's nuclear site in Isfahan, Iran, April 4, 2024...

Associated Press

Israel, Iran play down apparent Israeli strike. The muted responses could calm tensions — for now

Israel and Iran are both playing down an apparent Israeli airstrike near a major air base and nuclear site in central Iran.

7 hours ago

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., talks to reporters just after lawmakers pushed a $95 bill...

Associated Press

Ukraine, Israel aid advances in rare House vote as Democrats help Republicans push it forward

The House pushed ahead Friday on a foreign aid package of $95 billion for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and other sources of humanitarian support.

9 hours ago

Associated Press

Idaho group says it is exploring a ballot initiative for abortion rights and reproductive care

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — A new Idaho organization says it will ask voters to restore abortion access and other reproductive health care rights in the state after lawmakers let a second legislative session end without modifying strict abortion bans that have been blamed for a recent exodus of health care providers. “We have not been […]

10 hours ago

Associated Press

An Alabama prison warden is arrested on drug charges

ATHENS, Ala. (AP) — The warden of an Alabama prison was arrested Friday on drug charges, officials with the state prison system confirmed. Chadwick Crabtree, the warden at Limestone Correctional Facility, was charged with the manufacturing of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana, possession of a controlled substance, and possession of drug paraphernalia, according to […]

10 hours ago

Associated Press

South Africa man convicted in deaths of 2 Alaska Native women faces revocation of U.S. citizenship

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Federal prosecutors want to revoke the U.S. citizenship of a South Africa man convicted of killing two Alaska Native women for allegedly lying on his naturalization application for saying he had neither killed nor hurt anyone. Brian Steven Smith, 52, was convicted earlier this year in the deaths of the two […]

11 hours ago

Associated Press

10-year-old boy confesses to fatally shooting a man in his sleep 2 years ago, Texas authorities say

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A 10-year-old boy has confessed to an unsolved killing in Texas, telling investigators that he shot a man he did not know while the victim slept, authorities said Friday. The boy, who was just shy of his eighth birthday when the man was shot two years ago, has been evaluated at […]

11 hours ago

Sponsored Articles

...

Midwestern University

Midwestern University Clinics: transforming health care in the valley

Midwestern University, long a fixture of comprehensive health care education in the West Valley, is also a recognized leader in community health care.

...

Fiesta Bowl Foundation

The 51st annual Vrbo Fiesta Bowl Parade is excitingly upon us

The 51st annual Vrbo Fiesta Bowl Parade presented by Lerner & Rowe is upon us! The attraction honors Arizona and the history of the game.

(KTAR News Graphic)...

Boys & Girls Clubs

KTAR launches online holiday auction benefitting Boys & Girls Clubs of the Valley

KTAR is teaming up with The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Valley for a holiday auction benefitting thousands of Valley kids.

As Nevada housing brightens, some see storm coming