The U.S. housing market is “settling into a much slower gear,” says a new report.
Eli Segall
Eli Segall joined the Review-Journal in 2016, covering real estate until 2023 when he joined the paper's investigations team. He rejoined the RJ's Business desk in 2025 to cover commercial real estate and other topics. Before the RJ, he covered real estate for four years at the Las Vegas Sun. Segall has also worked for the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal, The Associated Press and other news groups. He has a bachelor’s in political science from the University of Michigan and a master’s in journalism from the University of Maryland. He has earned awards from the Nevada Press Association, Best of the West, New York State Society of CPAs, National Association of Real Estate Editors and others.
Las Vegas Strip hotel-casinos make it harder to find gambling capital’s hidden history
From Chinatown to Blue Diamond Hill, several new projects could start taking shape in 2026.
A California real estate firm plans to develop a new building for a Southern Nevada university.
Southern Nevada made plenty of news with casinos, real estate and more.
A North Dakota hotel magnate built another project in Las Vegas this year.
A Southern California developer finished the project, which spans more than 100,000 square feet, in 2022.
The original developers invested more than $120 million into the project near the iconic “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign, records show.
Nationwide, builder confidence “inched higher” to end the year but remained “well into negative territory,” a trade group said.
Howard Hughes Holdings wants to transform into a diversified holding company.
Las Vegas developer Ali Kaveh aims to break ground next year on the project, called Jade Promenade.
A sprawling property of concrete block homes is being transformed, in a project slated to cost $350 million to $400 million.
After Tony Hsieh’s will was filed in court this past spring, probate lawyers were left scratching their heads.
Attorneys alleged the late Zappos CEO’s will, which surfaced years after his death, is a fake. His dad’s legal team stated multiple times in court filings that the younger Hsieh died without a will.
