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Report: Nearly 34 percent of Las Vegas homeowners underwater
WASHINGTON — Nearly 34 percent of Las Vegas homeowners remain underwater, according to a report Tuesday from online real estate database Zillow.
But they aren’t alone. Nearly 10 million Americans remain financially trapped by homes worth less than their mortgage debts — an enduring drag on the U.S. economy almost seven years after the housing bust triggered the Great Recession.
During the first three months of this year, 18.8 percent of homeowners with a mortgage — 9.7 million — owed more on their loans than their properties would sell for, according to online real estate database Zillow. Though that was an improvement from the 25.4 percent figure of a year ago, the share of such “underwater” homeowners is about four times the historic average.
An additional 18.1 percent of mortgage holders were “effectively” underwater: They had equity, but the proceeds from selling their home would be too low to recoup the sales costs and also put a down payment on a new property. In Las Vegas, the “effective” underwater rate was 50.6 percent.
The report also showed that about 13 percent of Las Vegans were delinquent on their mortgages.
A Friday report from the Mortgage Bankers Association showed that Nevada ranked No. 2 in the nation in the first quarter for its share of loans that are 90 days or more late, at 3.8 percent. The state placed No. 8 for share of mortgages in foreclosure, at 3.5 percent.
Still, the numbers look better than they have in years. The 43,888 Nevada mortgages past due or in foreclosure were the state’s lowest number since the third quarter of 2007. At their peak during the recession, foreclosures and delinquencies numbered 134,159.
Also, negative equity topped out at around 70 percent in 2012, according to Zillow.
The consequence is that few Americans are putting their homes on the market, thereby limiting the economic growth made possible by sales. Because of the shortage of homes being listed, bidding wars have inflated prices in parts of the country to levels that squeeze out many first-time and middle-class buyers.
The problem is most pronounced among starter homes with prices averaging around $100,000, 30.2 percent of whose owners are burdened by underwater mortgages, sometimes called negative equity.
“The unfortunate reality is that housing markets look to be swimming with underwater borrowers for years to come,” said Stan Humphries, chief economist at Zillow.
The share of mortgage holders with negative equity is projected to drop to 17 percent at the start of next year, according to Zillow.
Several major U.S. metro areas are stuck with residents who have high rates of negative equity. In Chicago, almost 45 percent are underwater or effectively underwater. The rate is 53.1 percent in Atlanta, 46.6 percent in Charlotte, 44 percent in St. Louis, and 43.2 percent in Tampa.
Sales of existing homes have slowed after strong growth in the first half of 2013. Americans bought homes at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.59 million in March, the lowest level since July 2012, according to the National Association of Realtors. It was the seventh drop in eight months.
Nationwide, the median sales price in March was $198,500, up 7.9 percent year-over-year.
There were nearly 2 million homes for sale at the end of March. But at the current sales pace, that’s enough to last only 5.2 months, below the 6 months’ supply that’s considered normal.
The Realtors will release April sales figures on Thursday. Economists surveyed by FactSet expect a slight 2.2 percent increase in the annual sales rate to 4.69 million.