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The Newsroom - 2008 |
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Southern Nevada's Economy Stays Flat

February 20, 2008 - Southern Nevada's economy is performing a "high-wire
balancing act" between a strong push of big investment spending along the Strip
and the drag of falling residential construction and real estate sales, a UNLV
economist said.

The Southern Nevada Index of Leading Economic Indicators has followed a flat
trajectory for the past 12 months, dipping slightly to 133.56 in January, the
Center for Business and Economic Research at University of Nevada, Las Vegas
reported.

The index climbed from 132.98 in January 2007, peaking at 133.82 in December.

A 16.3 percent decline in November's gaming revenue contributed to the downward
trend. Seven of the index's 10 data series showed positive change from the same
month in the previous year.

"Still, the six-month forecast remains flat, (with) no clear sign of an overall
recession in the data, despite the veil of pessimism coming from the media,"
economist Keith Schwer said.

The economic index, compiled by the Center for Business and Economic Research,
is a six-month forecast from the month of the data, based on a net-weighted
average of each series after adjustments for seasonal variation.

The accompanying Review-Journal chart includes several of the index's
categories, along with data such as new residents and employment and housing
numbers, updated for the most recent month for which figures are available.

A separate index measuring Clark County business activity declined 1.7 percent
from the previous month and 3 percent from a year ago. It's the largest monthly
decline in the past year, Schwer said.

The business activity index had been increasing at an average of 0.9 percent
each month, even with housing in the doldrums and international finance markets
left scrambling for liquidity and in some cases facing insolvency, Schwer said.

"Essentially, the Southern Nevada economy has been flat over the past year and a
half," he said.

Las Vegas' commercial market performance could become the story of the year,
research analyst Jeremy Aguero of Applied Analysis said at a recent economic
forecast. Commercial building permits fell to 49 in December, compared with 91
in the same month of the previous year.

Still, the market has 14 million square feet of commercial space coming on line
during a time when employment is slowing and apartment vacancy is substantially
higher than a year ago, he said.

"Expect projects not to be completed. Fewer projects will go from planned to
under construction," Aguero said. "There's going to be less office and
industrial development."

Robert Shiller, professor of economics at Yale University, said there's a "good
chance" the housing recession will go on for years. American real estate values
have lost about $1 trillion and that could triple over the next few years, he
said.
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Housing futures contracts are pointing to losses of around 35 percent in area
such as Florida, California and Las Vegas over the next five years, Shiller
said.

After posting nine consecutive months of decline, the construction index turned
positive in August, September, October and November. The stockpiling of
residential permits toward the end of the year inflated the index on a
month-to-month basis, Schwer said.

The construction industry has lost about 4,500 jobs, roughly 4 percent of its
work force, and conditions are not as strong as suggested, he said.

"Looking ahead, jobs for completed projects may not be as easily taken up by the
same number of jobs for new projects," Schwer said.

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Author: H. Smith, Las Vegas Review-Journal
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