As a real estate school committed to excellence, we believe it is our responsibility to provide information on national and Arizona real
estate trends and developments. We constantly update our news database with national and Arizona real estate news to help educate and
inform both our students and the public.
First the Arizona housing market crashed. Then governments across the Valley were forced to wave goodbye to many of their building inspectors and planners. ...
The Tucson economy is wallowing in recession, dragged down by a robust housing market that went bust in 2006 and 2007 and likely won't boom again until next ...
Ian Bruce Eichner is on the verge of losing control of his Las Vegas casino-resort project -- 16 years after a similar loss in Times Square. His roller-coaster track record shows that in commercial real estate, failure on an epic scale need not be a career killer.
Russian oil magnate Roman Abramovich has bought a Colorado ranch for $36.3 million … Baseball great Henry "Hank" Aaron has listed his West Palm Beach, Fla., home that borders a golf course for $900,000 … plus more. Photos
A small fish with a healthy appetite for mosquito larvae is being pressed into service in California, Arizona, Florida and other areas struggling with foreclosures. The problem: swimming pools of abandoned homes have turned into breeding grounds.
A major provision of the housing-market legislation passed by the House Thursday might not help as many borrowers as some expect, trade groups that represent mortgage companies say.
June Fletcher explains how to find real-estate agents who focus on foreign buyers – critical now as these home hunters see U.S. properties as bargains.
But real estate experts point out that the decline in the housing market means prices are correcting from the overinflated values from the housing boom a ...
The median prices in the Phoenix area for new condos and townhouses has been steadily climbing despite the real-estate downturn. They reached $300000 in the ...
The latest flash point in the debate over the nation's bursting housing bubble is this: Since so many American houses are worth less than their mortgages, should the government do more to get lenders to settle for less than the full debt, even if it may cost taxpayers some money?