Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Las Vegas Home Inspectors

I really must begin by thanking Diann Tonnesen for offering to allow me to blog on her site. In case you’re not aware Diann is somewhat of an icon in the Las Vegas real estate community. To be offered to provide input for her web site is truly an honor. Thank you, Diann.

Diann told me that I could write about anything I wanted to write so I chose something that has been needling me for quite some time now; the way people shop for a Las Vegas home inspector. Do you realize how most people shop for a home inspector? They gain a list of inspectors, usually from their real estate agent, and call three or four inspectors asking what they charge for the inspection. They generally do this without knowing what they are buying. Especially with all the Las Vegas foreclosures on the market being sold "as is, where is" this truly boggles the mind.

Can you imagine people shopping for a car they same way they shop for a home inspector? It would look something like this:

Ring, ring.
“Hello, Lamborghini, Mazarati, Rolls Royce, Bentley dealership, can I help you?”
“Yeah, hi. You guys sell cars, right?”
“Yes ma’am, we do.”
“What do you charge for them?”
“Excuse me?
“Yeah, you know, how much do they cost?”
“Well are you aware of what kind of cars we sell?”
“Naw, I’m really not interested in hearing about that, I’m just calling around getting prices.”
“Well we have a beautifully reconditioned Bentley on sale this week that is valued at $35,000 that we are selling as a lost leader for $22,000.
“That’s great. Twenty-two thousand hunh? Okay, I may call you back. Thanks for your time.”
Ring, ring.
“Yeah, Arties Autos. What do you want?”
“Yeah, hi. You guys sell cars, right?”
“Why sure we do. What cha lookin for toots?”
“How much do you charge?”
“Well I can put you in this sweet little Yugo that was towed in, I mean, that came in last night for say… $15,000.”
“Fifteen thousand hunh? Okay. Sweet. I’ll take it.”

Sound absurd? Well sure it does. But many, many people who are about to make what is often the single largest purchase they’ll make in their entire life shop for their home inspector and their Las Vegas mortgage loans the same exact way.

So here is where I am coming from: I retired from the Navy in 1998 after spending nearly my entire adult life as an engineering inspector. I wasn’t just an “engineering inspector,” I was an engineering inspector and instructor where I was one of eight members of an elite team that earned the distinction as the most successful engineering inspection team in the history of the United States Navy. The distinction still stands today where our success record has never been matched.

When I retired from the Navy I transitioned into the civilian world as a Las Vegas real estate agent. After several years as a modestly successful real estate agent I became very frustrated with the quality and depth of home inspections available for my clients. There simply weren’t any good inspections available. The inspectors were more interested in protecting their own liability through the use of complicated and legalistic inspection agreements than they were in protecting my clients. I couldn’t even find an inspector who would walk on a concrete tile roof. They mostly used binoculars to review the roofing.

I thought the public deserved better. I thought people wouldn’t mind paying a little more for a true quality inspection where the inspector spent hours really investigating the home rather than hiring an inspector that spent several minutes walking through the home filling out a worthless checklist that contained no actual useful information.

I set out to create such a service. Now, after nearly eleven years performing thousands of home inspections, continually refining our procedures, attending thousands of hours of training, holding hundreds of training seminars, and developing an organization that is truly unique and first class I can truly state that there is no better inspection service available in the entire Las Vegas Valley, regardless of the price. It is not an opinion; it is a fact. We have inspecting Las Vegas homes down to an art. We don’t do cheap inspections, and our service is nothing like the inspections that the cheap guys perform.

Nowadays, the most common comment I hear is that we don’t charge enough for our inspections (compared to what we provide). I once had a home buyer say that he didn’t think we charged half of what we should charge for our service. I promptly quipped, “That’s not a problem. You’re more than welcome to pay double.” To my astonishment he did exactly that.

It is a statistical fact that the average home inspector ends up in litigation an average of three times each year because of issues the inspector did not discover and disclose in the course of his inspection. In eleven years that my company has been in existence neither I nor any of the inspectors who work for me has ever been named in any litigation in conjunction with a home we inspected. We have never gone to arbitration; we have never gone to mediation; and we were recently named on the Honor Roll for the Better Business Bureau of Southern Nevada, once again, for maintaining a complaint-free status.

For the consumer who swallows the paradigm that all home inspections are pretty much the same and selects their home inspector based solely upon the price of the inspection, they often get exactly what they are looking for: a cheap inspection. But for the consumer who shops for their home inspector based upon the quality of the service provided and who is able to discount the paradigm that all home inspections are the same: these are people who draw outside the lines and when they stumble across our firm we reward them with a Picasso every time. I can only hope that when it is time for you to get a home inspection you are able to discern the difference between “Art” and “Artie.” Have a great day!


Paul J. Donohue, RHI, RREI, CREI
President / Senior InspectorSpectrum Inspection Group Inc.
8345 Coyado Street
Las Vegas, NV 89123

Email: pdonohue@INSPECTLV.com
Web: http://www.inspectlv.com/
Scheduling: (702) 269-6716

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Good News for Cosmopolitan Condo Owners


To the right, the Las Vegas Cosmopolitan Condos and the
Bellagio Hotel and Casino, to the left the MGM CityCenter project.
Phot0 taken September 5th, 2008.

Many proposed high rise condo projects around the country have had the plug pulled in the past two years due to cost overruns and tightening credit. Since Deutsche Bank announced they were beginning foreclosure proceedings on the Las Vegas Cosmopolitan condo hotel project at the beginning of 2008 on their $760 million dollar loan, over 1800 contract owners have been holding their breath, wondering if the development would be completed. Or if they would get their money back in full if the development was canceled.


There were many "interested parties" making bids to purchase the project, but as of this week Deutsche Bank has taken over full ownership of the Cosmopolitan under an affiliate, Nevada Property I. Deutsche Bank was the high bidder, paying $1 billion at a recent foreclosure sale to acquire ownership of the project.


And Deutsche Bank isn't letting any grass grow under its feet to make sure the project goes forward. It has already inked contracts with Related Companies to take over as the resort's new developer. In addition Perini Corp. signed a new contract to complete construction work on the project. Perini has been working on the project from the beginning, and was being paid under an interim agreement since March when Deutsche Bank began foreclosing after the original developer, Bruce Eichner, failed to complete a deal to secure more financing. Increased construction costs helped drive the Cosmopolitan's construction budget from its original $2 billion price in early 2006 to its current $3.9 billion price, and Eichner was unable to find a new partner with enough capital to infuse into the project.


A letter has already been drafted to contract owners by the resort's new developer, Related Companies, letting them know of the management changes and informing them of progress to date. This letter will go out on Monday to almost 1825 contract holders, assuring them of the project's completion. To date over 50% of the Cosmopolitan's exterior construction has been completed, and it is anticipated that by December of 2008 owners will be celebrating the "topping off" of both towers, including the penthouse units. The new proposed completion date for the entire project is estimated for the second quarter of 2010.
Along with a rebounding resale housing market, this is great news for the local Las Vegas real estate market. For four months straight statistics have shown a significant rise in Las Vegas homes sales, with multiple offers on lower end properties, especially Las Vegas foreclosures. The buyers are back!

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Sales Statistics Brighter for Las Vegas Real Estate





Things seem to be looking up in Las Vegas according to the statistics, no matter what the national media is reporting. In July 2008, 3036 units were sold, and inventory ended the month at 22,178. At the current rate of consumption, that is 7.3 months of inventory, and many Las Vegas new homes developments are reporting waiting lists again. For those who are wondering when the bottom is going to be reached, we are getting very close to what has historically been called a “normal market”.


And for those that think they can lowball the already ridiculous foreclosure prices on Las Vegas homes, think again. There were 3036 closings in July, and here are the averages between list price and sales price:


For units that sold for under $500k, the average unit sold for $2,888 less than the asking price.


For all units selling under $1m, the average unit sold for $3,855 less than the asking price.


For ALL units selling in July, (including the multi million dollar penthouses and homes which bring the dollar amounts up) the average unit sold for $5,326 less than the asking price.


1,220 of the 3036 units that closed in July 2008 closed at a HIGHER sales price than their asking price. In other words, 40% of the homes sold, actually closed at more their advertised list price. The low prices on Las Vegas foreclosures are generating multiple offers on each property and creating mini bidding wars reminiscent of the "golden years" of 2004 and 2oo5.

Another good indicator is the percentage of listings taken vs sales over the past few years. In 2008 so far 34% of all listings taken have sold as opposed to 2007 when only 24% of all listings taken sold.

And it looks like with the anticipated population growth over the next 12 years, that things will start moving back up in price. Jeremy Aguero, a principal at Applied Analysis, was quoted in the paper saying he expects "Southern Nevada’s population by 2020 will grow to 3 million, from 2 million”. The Clark County School District is the fifth-largest school system in the country with 308,783 students, and district officials predict enrollment will grow to 473,000 students by 2018. Pointing to projects such as the CityCenter development under construction on the Strip, Aguero said, "We're not going to have all the employees to fill all the jobs we're going to create in the next 10 years."

Think about that for a minute. That means that there will have to be a roughly 50% increase in housing over what is currently built. With the scarcity of land for sale in Las Vegas, prices may just start creeping up before the analysts are predicting. This is one real estate agent who definitely thinks we are seeing the bottom of the market and is buying as much as she can.