Nevada

Blog by Chris Shouse
Las Vegas, Nevada

All about Nevada, Traveling in Nevada, The Real Estate Market in Nevada both for buyers and sellers, A few traveling tips. A little bit of everything. Enjoy!!!!!

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RE: Reverse Mortgage Good Idea?
good post. it is too bad that some companies feel...
RE: Solution for Vacant Houses
Judy Thanks for the comment, you raise some good...
RE: Solution for Vacant Houses
Wondering how difficult it would be to get the ten...
RE: Short Sale Refi's
Calli, Thanks for the information.  I hope e...
RE: Short Sale Refi's
If you are looking to short refi because you are b...

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Nevada

Homeowners are now going to sue

May. 2, 2008
Categorized in: Las Vegas Market

Home owners facing foreclosure bringing suits against lenders, real estate agents, apprisors

Should the homeowners sue?

It is now official the law office of Mainor Eglet Cottle trial lawyers are preparing several lawsuits against Realtors®, lenders and appraisers.  To quote Mr. Cottle " a triangle of professionals, every one of whom failed consumers most of the time."  Mr. Cottle said he will prove that agents, lenders, and mortgage brokers failed their fiduciary duty to explain all buying and borrowing options.  He contends that the home buyers should have been given professional  recommendations in their best interest.  Again to quote Mr. Cottle "instead agents and brokers focused on commissions and corporate bounuses and put buyers into adjustable rate mortgages that adjusted upward."

Here is the link for full article Las Vegas Review Journal

States also filing lawsuits include, Arizona, California, Ohio, Maryland and New Mexico.  These states are also claiming professional lapses could cost hundreds of thousands of homeowners to lose their property.

I can not speak for lenders, appraisers , or even other Realtors®.  I can only speak for myself and I work with a lot of buyers.  If asked about a lender I give out several cards of lenders I have worked with before.  The buyers choose their lender all on their own and the only time I get involved is to see how the loan is coming along.  I am not a lender and I would never presume to give advice on a loan.  Are there greedy and predatory lenders out there?  You bet.  Are there greedy and unethical Realtors® out there?  You bet, but for the most part they are just hard working professionals helping the american public realize the american dream of home ownership. 

Short Sale Refi's

Feb. 9, 2008
Categorized in: Short Sales

Short Refi's

On January 19Th 2008 I read an article written by Jeff Lazerson founder and president of an on line brokerage Mortgage Grader on BankRate.com .  I have put off writing anything about it in hopes that more people would be talking about it.  I have been talking to other Realtors® about this for at least 6 months.  As prices keep going down in the Las Vegas area, my heart aches for the people who are going to lose their homes and because they are behind in their payments, their credit is in the toilet and they can not get refinanced because of that.
In Mr. Lazerson's scenario lenders would refi what the house is worth now forgiving the difference.  The only question I have is what price drops would they use?

I have some clients that paid $790K for a beautiful home.  I ran comparatives for them yesterday and that Max comparison is $649K which is down $141K.  But the median is $550K which is a whopping $240K difference.  WOW.  So what price would the lenders use to refi? If my clients could refi at say 6% for $550,000 they could make the payments and not lose their homes.  If something like this does not happen for them they will lose their home. 

Wait though, are you thinking about the counseling and offers to freeze rates at an introductory rate for 5 years?  Why would anyone do that when their homes are not worth what they paid for them.  Sure real estate has always had their ups and down but $240,000 drop in a year?

Who is to blame for all this?  Greedy lenders?  Builders creating scarcity?  Investors driving up prices?  I really hated that period when a home would only be on the market 5 minutes.  I had to beg a seller once to let us come and look at his house at 7am in the morning and stand in his kitchen to write the offer. 

Even after the foreclosures stop appraised values are going to take many years to go back to where the value is back in these homes.

Read the BankRate.com article and give me your thoughts.  

                       
     

 

 

Using a Buyers Agent

May. 14, 2007
Categorized in: The Buying Process
Using a buyers agent can be a very smart move.   This is a definite buyers market, and a great time to buy.  Mortgage rates are still at all time lows and there are many properties out there to buy.  Some sellers however have not realized that they can not get the same amount of money for their places that they could just 2 years ago.  For the first time in a long time, home sellers that bought in the last few years may not be able to sell and get a profit.  So they will test the market so to speak by pricing their home on the high side.  What if you fall in love with the house but you know it is priced to high.  The seller is not ready to talk lower price.  Your buyers agent can really help with the negotiations.  He or she will keep in touch with the sellers agent having a pulse and a phone call when the seller is considering a price reduction.  They will know what is important to the sellers, price, selling quickly thus having a short closing period.  A good buyers agent will guide you through a very stressful time.  The best time to put in an offer is just before the seller is ready to do a price reduction.  Otherwise you might end up paying too much because after the price reduction you run the risk of other buyers being interested in the house.  Your buyers agent will be able to tell you when the time is right.    

Twilight at the Oasis in Nevada

Aug. 19, 2006
Categorized in: What Grows in Nevada

                                                 
If you look close in front of the Nectarine tree you will see a tiny bunny.  All summer she would come and eat the fruit, and then it was gone.  For the last few weeks we have put out fruit and she has come to look for us in the evening. We keep putting the fruit just a little closer every evening and someday maybe someday she will let us pet her???  I think the geraniums look nice too.


The is a bird called a  Great-Tailed Grackle.  I guess they are really considered trash birds but they are so funny to watch.  The male of the species is a polygamous and very stuck up.  When there are two males in the same area, they strut around with their beaks up in the air.  We feed them bread and they come and dip the pieces in the water fountain.  The babies are the funniest, they squawk and squawk until their mother stuffs something in their mouth.  She is trying to teach them how to get their own bread and dip it. 


This is a baby male, even as a baby he is bigger than his mom.  He is smart though, at least he learned how to dip his bread, not all of them are this brilliant.

My mom and I live on the golf course in Sun City Summerlin.  We have a beautiful view of the mountains.  Twilight is my favorite time of the day.  All of the harshness of the day melts away and a softness lays over the golf course.  Then we have beautiful sunsets that have after glow all across the valley.  AAAAWWWW twilight in the desert. 

 

Manhattan in Las Vegas

Jul. 25, 2006
Categorized in: Manhattan in Las Vegas

To see all of the different Manhattan type projects in Las Vegas,visit my website:

www.redcarpetgrouplasvegas.com     I have everything broken down by area.

Las Vegas is heading skywards.  With the cost of land and the dwindling supply, when you take away the BLM land there is no where to go but UP.  In five years you will not be able to recognize the skyline of Las Vegas.  There is every imaginable project going, condos, lofts, towers, and an Urban village which will be like brownstones.  The Strip is not the only place that is seeing the towers, the Harmon Corridor is becoming the hippest place just off srtip as seen by the article below from the local paper.

The Harmon Corridor

From the Las Vegas Review Journal.....

More than $20 billion is being invested in development along the burgeoning Harmon Avenue corridor, which is rapidly becoming the hip hangout off the Strip.

The 3-mile Harmon corridor will be anchored by the Hard Rock Hotel and University of Nevada, Las Vegas on the east end and the Palms on the west end, once Clark County Public Works builds an interchange at Valley View Boulevard linking Harmon to Flamingo Road.

Among major projects in planning or under construction along Harmon are MGM Mirage's Project CityCenter, the Hard Rock expansion, a W hotel from Starwood Resorts, the Chateau time share by Marriott, Panorama Towers, Turnberry's condominium-hotel at the MGM Grand and the Cosmopolitan hotel-casino.

Los Angeles developer Richard Alter bought Alexis Park and is spending $500 million to renovate it as a gaming property. MetroFlag, led by Las Vegas developer Brett Torino, plans to build two 55-story luxury residential and hotel towers where the Harley-Davidson Caf sits at the corner of Harmon and the Strip.

Las Vegas-based Centra Properties, which is developing the 100-acre Town Square mixed-use project with Turnberry Associates on Las Vegas Boulevard South, recently formed a joint venture with The Related Cos. to buy and develop a 25-acre site on Harmon that's now home for the 1,000-unit Harbor Island apartments. The companies reportedly spent $85 million to acquire the land.

Preliminary plans for the $2 billion project call for a boutique hotel, a retail shops and eight condo-hotel towers in the 350-foot to 400-foot range, though nothing is defined, Centra principal and cofounder Jim Stuart said.

"There are cities around the country and around the world trying to think about how to redevelop," Stuart said. "Here's this obscure street that has secondary, even degenerate-type housing. All of these developers are coming in without any economic help from the city. What they're doing to Harmon, it's just off the chart."

Centra Properties partner Kenneth Sullivan III said: "The rest of the city doesn't know what's about to happen here."

Scott Gragson, a Colliers International land broker, negotiated the sale of 33 acres of apartments near Harmon and Koval Lane to home builder D.R. Horton for about $2.6 million an acre. Part of that land was then sold to Starwood for the W hotel, which is planned for the site of the Ice nightclub.

"It could be the biggest boom we've ever seen in Las Vegas," Gragson said. "I think the sky's the limit. One thing is it (Harmon) dead-ends at UNLV, so it's like its own private boutique strip. It's unbelievable on paper what will happen there. Take pictures of it because it's going to be completely different. It's going to be night and day."

The D.R. Horton property wasn't part of a controversial land deal that Gragson was involved in that federal and local authorities are now investigating.

Authorities are investigating the Clark County Aviation Department's land sale process after Gragson and his investment partners were able to buy a parcel that was deed-restricted for a cemetery and then get it rezoned for commercial use.

Gragson said land owners are getting anywhere from $3 million to $7 million an acre along Harmon. The estate of Richard Tam owns 12 acres behind the Aladdin and reportedly wants $200 million for it, a real estate source said.

Turn the corner at Koval and more development is planned, including the Aqua Blue high-rise condo project with a restaurant and fitness center tied to former National Basketball Association star Michael Jordan.

Although much of Harmon Avenue's development is slated for high-end residential instead of gaming, Centra's project will blend the two, Centra President Frank Beck said.

"For one thing, the Strip is done growing linearly and our idea is to drive it nodal," he said. "The investment is toward a hipper place in town and it's largely along Harmon because there's land ready to be regenerated there."

Beck said you'd be hard-pressed to find this much development anywhere in the country in such a short span of time and distance.

"The real high-volume investment seems to be happening here. Everything else seems to be peripheral," he said.

MGM Mirage Chief Financial Officer Jim Murren said he's never seen such a "frenzy" over a small piece of the world in his 14 years on Wall Street and seven years in Las Vegas.

"Harmon will become, I believe, something along the lines of a Madison Avenue or Park Avenue, if you relate it to New York," he said. "It's going to be a residential corridor of condos and boutique hotels."

It began with Irwin Molasky building Park Towers and Turnberry Associates coming here from Florida to build Turnberry Place, Murren said. He remembers looking at Turnberry's models and being impressed by their expertise and quality.

That's why MGM Mirage became a partner with Turnberry in the Residences at MGM Grand, which is selling its second tower after "overwhelming success" with its first 586-unit tower.

"The point is, that stimulated a lot of demand for these 80 (high-rise) projects or whatever the number is," he said.

Murren has been eyeing the 55-acre Project CityCenter site ever since the merger of MGM Grand and Mirage Resorts and said the project will be a "dramatic departure" from anything the company has previously done.

"It'll be a city in and of itself here. Our economic responsibility is to make money for our shareholders and for our employees. Our social responsibility is to provide a greater array of cultural, educational and residential opportunities for our community. That's the genesis of CityCenter," he said.

Harmon is destined to become an east-west transportation corridor much like Flamingo Road and Tropicana Avenue, going from the Palms to UNLV.

Clark County Public Works is doing $11.5 million in road work on Harmon between Las Vegas Boulevard and Polaris Avenue, including the completed bridge over Interstate 15, department spokesman Bobby Shelton said.

The multiphase project will eventually connect Harmon west of the railroad tracks. A multimillion-dollar interchange at Valley View has yet to be designed.

The first phase of improvements began three years ago with storm drain installation and the next project is the realignment of Harmon west of the Strip, Shelton said.

Added Centra's Stuart: "I see it being a product of new thinking, our new urban core. Harmon Avenue is going to develop with projects not so much geared toward tourists, but for a living environment brought to a scale that's livable."

It's time for Las Vegas developers and planners to "think urban," said Bruce Eichner, chief executive officer of 3700 Associates, developer of the $1.5 billion Cosmopolitan mixed-use project on a sliver of land on Harmon, directly south of Bellagio.

He said classic Las Vegas was built horizontally because land wasn't an issue. The cost of acreage wasn't nearly what it is today and land was readily available.

Eichner is taking advantage of every square inch of 8 1/2 acres that 3700 Associates acquired last year from Margaret Elardi for $90 million. The land includes 400 feet of Strip frontage and 1,100 feet along Harmon.

He's putting a hotel tower over the casino with five levels of underground parking.

"People come to Las Vegas to be entertained and that entertainment has evolved from what I perceived it to be 10 years ago, which was inexpensive rooms, inexpensive food and gaming," Eichner said. "So I took my front door and made it a casino and retail because that's a form of entertainment."

Eichner, a successful high-rise developer in New York and Miami, said he's more focused on the areas north and south of his property than east and west. He wants to capture the 55,000 people a day that walk past his property and overflow crowds from Bellagio, Paris Las Vegas and the Aladdin.

The Cosmopolitan, scheduled to break ground in August, will have 1,000 hotel rooms and 1,700 condo-hotel units in two towers, a 70,000-square-foot casino, 300,000 square feet of retail and restaurants, a 1,800-seat theater and the Cosmo Beach Club on the pool deck. Condo prices range from $475,000 for 670-square-foot studio units to $850,000 for 970-square-foot, one-bedroom units.

"Our theme is cosmopolitan," Eichner said. "Cosmopolitan is urban and urban is architectural and experiential."

Palms owner George Maloof announced plans for a $600 million expansion that includes a 40-story hotel tower now under construction and 50-story condominium hotel and spa to be called Palms Place.

The hotel became the newest hip property in Las Vegas when it opened in 2001, attracting Hollywood celebrities and high-profile professional athletes.

The expansion will feature an entertainment component that mixes nightlife and dining. The Palms entered a licensing agreement with Playboy Enterprises that lets the hotel use the Playboy brand name for a high-end lounge and a themed retail venue.

The Palms and the N9NE Group, which operates hot spots ghostbar and Rain in the existing tower, will operate the new venues.

Harmon

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