Incline Village Immune to Subprime Sorrows

View_2Cruising around the internet, I came across an interesting article by Realtor Don Kanare in nearby Incline Village, Nevada. For those of you out-of-towners who may not know, Incline is just over the hill from Reno on the beautiful northern shore of Lake Tahoe. It’s a ritzy little vacation town known for being a tax haven for the rich and sometimes famous.

Don asserts that due to the high number of wealthy second home owners and the relatively low numbers of properties carrying any loans at all, Incline Village should be relatively immune to the whole subprime situation. He makes some valid points.

I asked my friends at Ticor Title to find out exactly how many individually owned housing units there are in Incline, Reno and Sparks, and how many of those have loans against them:

Location          
Loans             
Total

Reno                  
35,583            
70,046
Sparks               
17,130            
30,608
Incline                2,201               6,882

So while Reno and Sparks run at about half, only one third of Incline properties carry any kind of mortgage at all. This certainly reduces Incline’s exposure to the problem. But once in a while, somebody gets into trouble. A friend of mine got a great deal last year on a foreclosure sale in Tyrolian Village.

More Incline Village market trivia:

2007 YTD           Sold                 Avg Price           Sales/List       DOM            
                                 75                   $1,334,639         93.02%           196

2006 YTD           Sold                 Avg Price           Sales/List       DOM            
                                 92                   $1,257,665         92.96%           137

2005 YTD           Sold                 Avg Price           Sales/List       DOM            
                                 129                  $917,100          95.82%            140

2004 YTD           Sold                 Avg Price           Sales/List       DOM            
                                 153                  $705,545          94.69%            142

2003 YTD           Sold                 Avg Price           Sales/List       DOM            
                                  97                   $629,508            93.05%           138

2 comments

  1. BanteringBear

    Lake Tahoe is a whole different animal than Reno/Sparks. I wouldn’t be surprised to see less subprime exposure there. That said, the area will not be immune to price declines. It could be hit fairly hard actually, as vacation homes are the first to go when people are experiencing financial distress. While the area certainly boasts a healthy number of homes for the uber rich, there are many modest cabins and homes which belong to the working middle class. I see a lot of flips languishing up there, and time will tell who’s swimming naked.

  2. Reno Ignoramus

    Much of what Mr. Kanare says about Incline is true. The average SFR homeowner there is pretty upscale. Probably not any subprime borrowers. Maybe not quite as upscale as Glenbook, where house values are even higher, but pretty upscale.

    The implication of Mr. Kanare’s comments is that if a community has no subprime borrowers who bought there, the market in that community is immune from any price declines. This is wrong. It is not just the presence of subprime borrowers that exert downward pressure on prices. Incline values fell during the last market downturn, and they will do so in this one. Even Mr. Kanare must acknowledge that houses are languishing (think we can get HONEST DOM figures for Incline?) and asking prices are dropping. Clearly, the prices in Incline are not ever going to approach the prices in Wingfield Springs. But the suggestion that prices CANNOT drop in Incline is absurd.
    Sorry, Don, not even Incline is immune to market forces.

    Tahoe always lags behind.

    Let’s all check back in a year and see.

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