Friday, May 8, 2009

Las Vegas, NV: Bellweather of Doom

Our co-writer made a post a while back, laying out a brief case for the collapse of present valuations of American housing stock. He forecasted (and still forecasts) an estimated 87% drop in value for desirable, non-redundant living space, along with almost every mortgaged houseowner ending up 'under water.'

According to the basic number we've seen bandied about, approximately two-thirds of all houseowners have mortgages. We can surmise, without too much imagination required, that if house prices do indeed plummet 87% or so, almost all of these mortgaged houseowners will be 'under water,' and will likely default on their debt. This will of course create an enormous glut on the real estate market, and devastate the debt-addicted banking system of the United States, and indeed the world.

Our co-writer is now partly vindicated, by the original Icon of Sin: Las Vegas, Nevada. In a recent Wall Street Journal article, a study shows that 67.2% of all homes in Las Vegas have "negative equity;" or, in the common tongue, the owners owe more on their mortgage than the house is presently valued. We point out that 67.2% is right around two-thirds of all houses (and thus virtually every owner with a mortgage is 'under water'); Las Vegas is now the bellweather of the United States housing collapse.

It is difficult - if not impossible - to put a time-frame on this collapse, but we are confident that said collapse is both in progress, and cannot be halted in real terms. However, the Federal Reserve's attempts to rekindle inflation will likely succeed, and when that day comes some of these 'under water' houseowners will at least have the succor of having their nominal property values resume an upwards march. That will be a phyrric victory, but we suspect that realisation will take some time to dawn on the average American citizen.

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