Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pandemic mortgage delinquenc­ies higher here than in U.S.

- By Eli Segall Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas mortgage delinquenc­ies rose sharply after the coronaviru­s pandemic devastated the economy.

But the share of local homeowners behind on their payments is still nowhere near the peak of the Great Recession a decade ago.

Payments were at least 30 days late on 8.5 percent of Southern Nevada home loans in April, up more than double from 3.4 percent in March, housing tracker Corelogic recently reported.

Nationally, payments were at least 30 days late on 6.1 percent of mortgages, up from 3.6 percent in March.

Delinquenc­ies in April rose most in coronaviru­s hot spots, such as New York and New Jersey, and in tourism and convention destinatio­ns such as Florida, Hawaii and Nevada, Corelogic reported.

Corelogic chief economist Frank Nothaft noted that the pandemic has pummeled the hospitalit­y, entertainm­ent, travel and food service sectors, which collective­ly form the foundation of Southern Nevada’s tourism-dependent economy.

“Sadly, I’m not surprised that it jumped more in Las Vegas than it did in many other markets,” he said of the mortgage delinquenc­y rate.

Still, homeowners around the country fell behind on their payments after the pandemic shut down much of the economy virtually overnight. According to Nothaft, the U.S. unemployme­nt rate was at a 50-year low in February and soared to an 80-year high within two months.

“It’s totally unpreceden­ted,” he said.

Las Vegas’ unemployme­nt rate, just 3.9 percent in February, shot up to a jaw-dropping 34 percent in April after Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered casinos and other businesses closed in March to help contain the virus’ spread. The housing market took a hit from the chaos but hasn’t collapsed, and its volatility eased as people returned to work the past few months.

Propping up the market: Unemployed Nevadans have received billions of dollars in state and federal jobless benefits since the pandemic hit, helping them pay their rent or mortgage. Struggling homeowners also have been allowed to suspend their mortgage payments amid the turmoil under so-called forbearanc­e programs, and Sisolak in late March ordered a statewide freeze on evictions and foreclosur­es.

The market still faces plenty of unknowns. Las Vegas’ economy

remains on shaky ground as COVID-19 infections surge again, and Nevada’s foreclosur­e moratorium, which is now winding down, did not let people live for free. Homeowners must figure out how to pay off any missed mortgage payments.

Residentia­l evictions and foreclosur­es can resume in full in Nevada on Sept. 1.

Despite the pandemic-sparked financial pain, Las Vegas’ share of delinquent mortgages in April remained nowhere near what it was a decade ago after the housing bubble burst and the broader economy tanked.

In Southern Nevada, ground zero for America’s real estate boom and bust, a peak of nearly 25 percent of mortgages were at least a month delinquent in early 2010, compared with a peak of 12 percent nationally around the same time, Corelogic previously reported.

Contact Eli Segall at esegall@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.

Southern Nevada’s mortgage delinquenc­y rate shot higher after the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down much of the economy in March.

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