* Located on the world-famous Las Vegas Blvd.
* 4 mi. South of Mandalay Bay Hotel
* 6 blocks North of Southpoint Casino
* 7 mi. to McCarran International Airport
* Near I-15 and 215 Hwys
* Near bus stop, shopping, restaurants.
EXTERIOR AMENITIES:
* 24 hr. guard-gated,
* 3 pools
* 3 spas
* Tennis court
* Fully equipped gym
* Club house
PARKING:
* Covered designated parking close to units
INTERIOR AMENITIES:
* Central Htg./A.C.
* Fireplace
* Laundry room
* Walk-in closet
* Roman bathtub for two
America's 10 Best Undervalued Places to Live
The real estate bust has created some attractive bargain opportunities in certain housing markets
By Luke Mullins
Posted July 16, 2009
While the national housing bust has devastated property values, it has also created some outstanding bargain opportunities for would-be home buyers—if you know where to look. During the first half of the decade, easy credit and speculative fervor sent home prices in certain states...
To pinpoint the nation's most undervalued housing markets, we turned to IHS Global Insight's first-quarter 2009 House Prices in America report, which uses household income, population density, and other data to compare a market's actual value with where it should be on a statistical basis. We then used employment, quality-of-life, and other research to determine America's best undervalued places to live.
Las Vegas. After a dizzying run-up in prices, Sin City has become a cautionary tale for real estate investors everywhere. Since its 2006 peak, Las Vegas home values have plummeted by more than 50 percent. And today—at $77 a square foot—existing homes are actually priced below the cost of building materials, says Steve Bottfeld, the principal of Las Vegas-based Marketing Solutions, which specializes in real estate economics. "That's truly undervalued," he says. Although the market may be depressed today, several factors will support strong housing demand in Las Vegas over the long haul, Bottfeld says. The opening of MGM Mirage's CityCenter, which is expected later this year, will bring new jobs. The city's enviable climate—hot summers and mild winters—and its exciting downtown district will continue to attract residents. And the best-in-class architectural design of area properties will appeal to would-be buyers. "We are on the bottom of prices at this point," Bottfeld says. "There is no question that the residential market in Las Vegas is undervalued." The median single family home price in Las Vegas was $140,000, in the first quarter, which IHS Global Insight considers 41 percent undervalued.
America's 10 Best Undervalued Places to Live: (Percent of undervaluation, according to IHS Global Insight.)
Las Vegas: 41 percent
Houston: 37 percent
Naples, Fla.: 33 percent
Oklahoma City: 29 percent
Sarasota, Fla. 28 percent
San Francisco: 25 percent
Atlanta: 24 percent
Omaha: 23 percent
College Station-Bryan, Texas: 21 percent
San Diego: 21 percent
Copyright © 2009 U.S.News & World Report LP All rights reserved.
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