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Friday, August 13, 2010

US Foreclosures – The “Las Vegas Index”

In the past few months, foreclosure rates have climbed.



Under any normal circumstances, an increasing rate of foreclosures would indicate that the housing market and economy are declining/struggling/suffering. But, these are not normal circumstances.

As everyone knows, US banks are sitting on large numbers of properties where the owners have not paid in months. Previously, the banks wanted to foreclose on these properties but could not, since any increase in foreclosures would have only added to the already large glut. The fact that foreclosures are climbing means that banks are actually able to foreclose. Put another way, foreclosure rates are climbing because the economy is improving, and banks are able to sell their foreclosed properties faster than they were several months ago.

To illustrate, I give you The Frost Report’s “Las Vegas Index.” I chose Las Vegas to measure the nation’s real estate health because it is, officially, the worst housing market in America - with the highest percentage of foreclosures and the largest peak-to-trough drop in prices. The Las Vegas Index is simple: it measures the number of detached foreclosures and listed properties available for sale between 0-$1 million USD, with 1 bed and 1 bath or more.



There are two things that are clearly evident by studying this chart. First, non-foreclosed properties are simply not selling. Therefore, many of the existing home sales statistics are, at this point in the economic recovery, essentially meaningless. Foreclosures will have to clear before regular home sales will make any meaningful recovery. Secondly, the number of foreclosures on the market has not increased in recent months, despite a larger number of properties being foreclosed upon: this means they are selling.

The increasing rate of foreclosures is a positive sign, not a negative one, for the US economic recovery. The sooner bad mortgages and loans clear out, the sooner bankers (and citizens) can get on with their lives. The US real estate market, though it has a long way to go, is improving steadily.

PS - If you were ever considering purchasing real estate in Las Vegas, now would be a very, very good time.
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"...the Committee anticipates a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in a context of price stability, although the pace of economic recovery is likely to be more modest in the near term than had been anticipated."

The Federal Reserve, Aug 10th 2010