Quote:
Originally Posted by bnk
Las Vegas seems to be the worst hit metro since Covid started.
They seem to have all of their eggs in one basket like Detroit did with the car industry years ago but I would expect them to bounce back after all of this shit gets back to normal if there ever will be a normal.
Anyone know how Vegas home prices have changed.
20 year go it was predicted the metro area would hit 3 M by now. It seems stuck at 2.2 M
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The data I posted is city proper, not metro area. But that's correct, Vegas has been hit hard. Here's the MSA percentages and you'll see Vegas in this list is 2nd to last.
* Jacksonville: +4.69%
* Phoenix: +4.16%
* Austin: +4.07%
* Salt Lake City: +3.86%
* Tampa: +3.58%
* Dallas: +2.75%
* Oklahoma City: +2.67%
* Portland: +2.44%
* Kansas City: +1.5%
* San Antonio: +1.43%
* Milwaukee: +1.41%
* Memphis: +1.36%
* Denver: +0.99%
* Raleigh, NC: +0.93%
* Indianapolis: +0.79%
* Atlanta: +0.78%
* Nashville: +0.36%
* Columbus, OH: +0.25%
* Cincinnati: -0.29%
* Charlotte: -0.39%
* Riverside, CA: -0.54%
* Louisville: -0.9%
* Providence: -1.02%
* Chicago: -1.07%
* Sacramento: -1.13%
* Houston: -1.54%
* Detroit: -1.85%
* Boston: -2.08%
* Miami: -2.11%
* Seattle: -2.28%
* St. Louis: -2.3%
* San Jose: -2.34%
* Minneapolis: -2.68%
* San Diego: -2.78%
* Orlando: -2.84%
* Philadelphia: -3.99%
* Cleveland: -4.32%
* San Francisco: -4.37%
* Pittsburgh: -4.42%
* Los Angeles: -4.49%
* Washington DC: -5.26%
* Baltimore: -5.42%
* New Orleans: -5.88%
* Honolulu: -5.99%
* NYC: -6.23%
* Virginia Beach: -6.42%
* Las Vegas: -7.68%
* Richmond, VA: -7.75%