View Full Version : Affluent Buyers Reviving Miami Market


desertpunk
July 28th, 2011, 05:16 PM
NY Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/27/business/affluent-buyers-reviving-market-for-miami-homes.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp)


Affluent Buyers Reviving Market for Miami Homes

By DAVID STREITFELD
Published: July 26, 2011

http://newsodrome.com/real_estate_news/paramount-bay-miami-18656493.jpg
Paramount Bay

MIAMI — South Florida is the default capital of the country. Here in Miami-Dade County, one out of five households with mortgages is in foreclosure. Nearby Broward and Palm Beach counties are not far behind. Nearly 200,000 South Florida families are stuck in the mire of default

And yet much of Miami is gripped by a housing mania as the oversupply of distressed homes dries up and foreigners and investors swoon. Only a few years after it seemed there were so many unwanted high-rise condominiums that the only solution was to tear some of them down, there are plans to build even more.

Home sales in the metropolitan area during the first half of the year rose 16 percent from 2010 for the best spring since 2007, according to the research firm DataQuick, far outpacing the negligible growth in the rest of the country. Two-thirds of the sales were all cash.

Prices, after a brutal drop, are firming up or even increasing. During the first six months of the year, there were 439 sales for at least $2 million, up 13 percent from last year. “People thought it would take at least a decade to get back to this point,” said Peter Zalewski, founder of Condo Vultures, a real estate consultant.

Gil Dezer, who co-developed the beachfront Trump Towers, saw 90 percent of the buyers in the project’s uncompleted second and third buildings abandon their deposits in the crash. Last week, Mr. Dezer achieved a milestone: he sold enough condos to pay off the $265 million mortgage on the property. Only about 12 percent of the apartments remain. “The Brazilians walk in, they don’t even negotiate,” said Mr. Dezer, who said he would announce two new projects by the end of the year. “It’s a no-brainer for them.”

For more than four years, the fate of the housing market here and across the country has been closely tied to the tremendous wave of foreclosures. In some communities, more than half of all home sales were bank repossessions. These cheap, often half-destroyed properties undermined neighborhoods and accelerated the market’s descent, prompting even more owners to walk away.

But now, as new foreclosures slow and lenders are forced to let old cases languish for legal reasons, some of the regions that were worst off when foreclosures were at flood tide are much improved with the process stalled. “People should thank the foreclosure mills,” said Mr. Zalewski, referring to the law firms that brought about freezes in foreclosures when they were caught using illegal methods. “They gave the whole market a reprieve.”

As a result, the balance between supply and demand in South Florida is shifting. In late 2008, as the financial crisis was peaking, there were 108,000 properties for sale and hardly any buyers. The region became a symbol of excess. Buyers abandoned their deposits and reneged on deals, buildings went bankrupt and squatters moved in. Now there are fewer than 48,000 properties for sale, Condo Vultures said. And with supply diminished, homes have value again.

Whether Miami and other stricken markets like Phoenix, Las Vegas and parts of California will continue to make progress depends on the fate of the two million American households in foreclosure and another two million in severe default. The nation’s attorneys general and the Obama administration are negotiating with the top mortgage servicers for new procedures for those in trouble. If the lenders get immunity from prosecution, foreclosures might speed up and the housing market could suffer another relapse.

In the meantime, the South Florida market is busy, although it offers a problematic blueprint for a national recovery. For the traditional buyer who wants to put down no more than 20 percent, loans are somewhere between tough and impossible. Many of the sales are to investors, rich people or foreign citizens benefiting from a weak dollar.

“Two years ago, everyone was gripped with fear,” said a mortgage broker, Grant Stern. “Now investors are gripped by greed.” Mr. Stern is suffering the consequences of better times. The landlord on his high-rise rental finally managed to make a deal with the bank to sell it for less than he owed. Last week, Mr. Stern had to move. His old place, a three bedroom, was $1,300 a month. Across the street, he is paying $2,179 for a two bedroom. “I’m downsizing my space by 30 percent yet spending 50 percent more,” he said.

Projects that were left for dead during the bust have sprung back to life. The Everglades, a two-tower, 49-story project that went bankrupt in 2009 with fewer than 10 percent of its units sold, has been reintroduced under the name Vizcayne. Paramount Bay, a 47-story condo building that was supposed to open in 2009 but ended up foreclosed, is finally on track to start selling in September.

A developer and marketing team that suffered sharp reversals in the crash, the Related Group and the International Sales Group, issued a promotional report a few weeks ago asserting that “the next chapter begins.” The tens of thousands of new condos built during the boom — and abandoned during the crash — will all be occupied by the end of next year, they said. “Do I want to say ‘boom’? ” Philip Spiegelman, a Related ISG executive, wondered in an interview. “That’s a little overly aggressive, but we clearly are being rewarded for offering very inexpensive real estate.”

Inexpensive is a relative term. Miami prices are about half what they were at the peak, but units in the project, called Apogee Beach, start in the high six figures. All 49 condos were reserved in 60 days. If construction begins as planned in November, it will be the first postcrash building in the area.

Some experts think Miami’s reprieve will be short-lived. “The banks will only keep the Grim Reaper at bay for so long,” said Jack McCabe, a real estate consultant. “There is going to come a day of reckoning when they will have to move this inventory.”

[...]

QuantumX
July 28th, 2011, 11:14 PM
Thanks for posting thiis, DP! Interesting stuff! Looks like Miami will not stop.

desertpunk
July 29th, 2011, 01:27 AM
They said Miami could be stagnant for as long as a decade. Now the building is ready to resume!




.

Bobdreamz
July 29th, 2011, 02:02 AM
Miami has some advantages that other markets do not. First is the amount of foreign investors who see Miami real estate as a bargain now. Secondly is that the vacancy rate for the rental market in Miami & south Florida has always been very low. Developers build condos not rental highrises or communities like in other cities so renters have nowhere to go except to lease condos. Lastly Miami has no room to build huge suburban subdivisions anymore. There simply aren't any huge tracts of land left within the Urban boundary line.

UMdev
July 29th, 2011, 03:12 AM
Here's another article:

Miami Condo Boom 2.0 Has Begun, International Buyers Providing The Spark

http://www.worldpropertychannel.com/us-markets/residential-real-estate-1/miami-condo-market-the-blue-doral-hyatt-residences-trump-hollywood-the-related-group-jorge-perez-miami-association-of-realtors-edgardo-defortuna-fortune-international-w-south-beach-craig-studnicky-related-isg-4576.php

QuantumX
July 29th, 2011, 03:47 AM
Here's another article:

Miami Condo Boom 2.0 Has Begun, International Buyers Providing The Spark

http://www.worldpropertychannel.com/us-markets/residential-real-estate-1/miami-condo-market-the-blue-doral-hyatt-residences-trump-hollywood-the-related-group-jorge-perez-miami-association-of-realtors-edgardo-defortuna-fortune-international-w-south-beach-craig-studnicky-related-isg-4576.php

Quote from beginning of article:
"Because Miami's prior decade of excessive condo building was something akin to a multi-year sporting event watched and followed by millions around the world, today's condo environment can now be summed up in three words: "Game On, Again!"

But the game is much different now.

Unlike the prior condo boom, fueled by thousands of U.S. consumers and condo speculators using 90% to 100% leverage to finance their purchases, today's buyers are mainly foreigners - and they buy in cash."

^^Well, I'll be damned! New stuff to photograph on the way!:):cheers:

miami305
July 29th, 2011, 05:52 AM
Great news....I need to decide where to invest next.......Opera Tower, Somewhere in Brickell or Paramount Bay......? before prices go up ..up..up..the roof.

CalleOchoGringo
July 30th, 2011, 07:04 PM
We need another leftist govt to take over another South American country. Something to get their rich and upper class to suddenly rush to transfer their wealth out of their country and into Miami Real Estate. Like Chavez did for Doral and Westonzuela! :lol:

miami305
July 31st, 2011, 01:38 AM
Westonzuela....lol...now that is funny.

CalleOchoGringo
July 31st, 2011, 02:41 AM
It's a pretty well known Miamism, its even in Urban Dictionary... surprised you haven't heard of it. It's been called that ever since all the upper class Venezuelans left Chavezuela and all settled in the same 2 Miami suburbs Doral and Weston.

Sounds funnier than Russian Isles Beach or Allapataminicana. Actually I made that last one up. ;)


It be nice if people would diversify but cattle and sheep don't mix. All the expats from one country tend to clump into pockets in certain parts of Miami.

miami305
July 31st, 2011, 03:55 AM
True....however I thought Colombians were the ones in Weston....just like my argentineans are in Little Buenos Aires....lol. I don't know...why would I want to live in another country only to be with the same people..??? I prefer to live where there is a lot of different people from different countries....I guess that is just me.

dave8721
August 4th, 2011, 09:25 PM
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/08/03/2343966/miami-dade-housing-prices-up-125.html

Excluding foreclosures and distressed properties, Miami-Dade County has the fastest rebounding home market in the country this year, with prices up 12.5 percent since January, a new report from real estate research firm CoreLogic shows.

CalleOchoGringo
August 5th, 2011, 03:08 AM
Just hope it lasts, it was a bloodbath in the stock market today, and may trigger a double dip.

QuantumX
August 5th, 2011, 12:26 PM
Yeah, it looks bad! It's not looking so good for a new 840-foot Banco Santader tower in Brickell.

The Miami Herald

Posted on Thu, Aug. 04, 2011
Stocks plummet, Dow closes down more than 500 points
Kevin G. Hall
McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — After a spate of bad economic news and a 10-day pounding of stock prices, Friday’s jobs report is likely to play an outsized role in either calming the waters or deepening fears that the U.S. economy is sliding back toward recession.
Stocks plummeted Thursday as investors fretted about weakening economic conditions and emergency steps announced by the European Central Bank that only heightened worries that big economies, led by Italy and Spain, are in deep trouble.

The Dow was down more than 300 points much of the day, and it plunged at the end to finish the day down 512.76 to close at 11,383.68. The S&P 500 fared no better, off 60.27 points to close at 1,200.07. The tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 136.68 points to end at 2556.39. Thursday’s plunge followed a breather Wednesday that broke an eight-day slide, the worst since October 2008, when the U.S. financial system was in meltdown.

Stocks led a broad selloff across financial markets that offered investors no place to hide. Gold and silver prices fell, as did crude oil and other commodities. Investors sought safety in U.S. bonds, with the yield, or interest rate, falling on 10-year bonds. The yield on one-month Treasury bills briefly went negative. That meant investors were willing to lose money by holding these bills, betting that it would represent a smaller loss than holding other financial assets. Yields on two-year Treasuries also hit a record low.

The financial-market volatility heightens attention to Friday's Labor Department monthly report on jobs, which has been dismal for two consecutive months. Perhaps surprisingly in light of the recent run of bad economic news, there are reasons to think the July jobs report may reverse the skid, with most forecasters projecting growth in the range of 90,000 to 120,000 new jobs.

Wednesday’s ADP National Employment Report, which gauges private payrolls, estimated that 114,000 private-sector jobs were created in July. The ADP report at times has been a good gauge for the government report that comes two days later, but at other times it's misfired wildly.

Another positive sign for jobs came Thursday, when the government reported that during the week that ended July 30, first-time claims for unemployment benefits were little changed at 400,000. That was lower than had been forecast, and the four-week average for these claims is at the lowest point since mid-April.

If roughly 100,000 jobs were added in July, that wouldn’t be enough to knock down the unemployment rate, a painful 9.2 percent in June. But after only 18,000 new jobs were reported in June and a subpar 54,000 in May — later revised down to just 25,000 — a triple-digit monthly gain would look and feel like up.

By most accounts, the economy is at a turning point: It could slide into recession or it could reaccelerate.

There are some positive indicators, including strong July retail sales by big chain stores such as Target and Costco. And General Motors reported Wednesday that July sales surpassed the same month last year by 7.8 percent.

Those positive signs were dampened by the Commerce Department’s report Tuesday on real income and consumption. It showed wages and income flat, and consumption down for the first time in two years, as consumers and businesses sat on the sidelines, boosting their savings.

That followed a glum report last Friday that second-quarter growth in the United States was up by only a sluggish 1.3 percent, and first-quarter growth was revised down to just 0.4 percent.

Thursday brought another troubling sign when the RBC Consumer Outlook Index showed consumer confidence slumping for the second straight month. The survey showed that 60 percent of Americans said in July that they were less comfortable making major purchasing decisions than they were six months before. That’s 12 points higher than the previous month’s survey.

It all has many economists worried about a double-dip recession.

“Are we in a recession, again?” asked the title of a research note Thursday by economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York.

“As the economic data continue to disappoint, we become more worried about the strength of the recovery. We took a sledgehammer to our forecasts last week, and now look for below-potential growth through the end of next year,” Michelle Meyer and her fellow economists wrote. “A lower growth trajectory brings greater risk of dipping into recession. We now believe there is a 35 percent chance of recession in the next year, about double where we put the odds this spring.”

The U.S. economy this year already has weathered a sharp spike in oil prices, supply-chain woes caused by Japan’s devastating earthquake, European financial turmoil and a self-inflicted wound to confidence from Washington’s manufactured threat of a default on the national debt.

All this led Meyer to warn that “the economy is one shock away from falling into recession.”

What to do?

The debt-ceiling compromise painfully reached by Congress and the White House ensures that there won’t be new federal spending to boost the economy. State and local governments continue to shed jobs. President Barack Obama is touting passage of trade deals with Colombia, Panama and South Korea as a potential spark, along with another year of waiving payroll taxes.

“I think there is one possibility they have not brought to the table, and that’s a tax holiday for repatriation of profits” from corporations with overseas operations, said Beth Ann Bovino, a senior economist at Standard & Poor’s in New York. “Since it is tax-related, that’s something that could get through” Congress.

Martin Regalia, the chief economist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, thinks there isn't much more government can do now, beyond promoting pro-growth policies that have a payback later.

“We have focused way too much on these sorts of artificial respiration-type approaches … rather than getting the patient into a good environment where it would repair itself,” he said.

The question of what to do weighs heavily on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. The Fed’s interest rate-setting Open Market Committee meets again next week, but most analysts see the central bank as almost out of bullets.

The Fed in June ended its protracted purchase of $600 billion in Treasury bonds, a process — called quantitative easing and dubbed QE2 — designed to spark economic activity. It’s unlikely that the Fed will go beyond what it's already purchased.

“Surely Bernanke & Co. will do something to save the day. They probably will, but their credibility is shot, because they’ve already shot their big guns,” Ed Yardeni, a veteran economic analyst, wrote in a research note Thursday. “QE2.0 should have been saved for when it might be really needed, like now rather than six months ago.”

During mid-July testimony to Congress, Bernanke signaled that he wasn’t out of ammo. Bovino, the Standard & Poor’s economist, thinks the Fed might choose to exchange the shorter-term bonds it purchased during QE2 for longer-term bonds, “creating even lower short-term interest rates than they already have.”

The Fed’s benchmark federal funds rate has been at zero since December 2008, and corporations are flush with cash and profitable. Banks are sitting on reserves rather than lending to consumers, who are paying down debt and boosting their savings. It’s not clear how much help even-lower interest rates would be.

“The Fed is basically in a bind. It is where the fiscal policy (normally) is going to come in place, and that doesn’t look like it's going to be an option,” Bovino said.

ON THE WEB

ADP National Employment Report

MORE FROM MCCLATCHY

Deficit-cutting deal may not dent defense spending much

Does debt deal put mortgage-interest deduction in play?

Source: Bank of America pursuing separate mortgage pact

McClatchy’s probe into roots of financial crisis, a Pulitzer finalist

To ask a question about this story or any economic question, go to McClatchy's economy Q&A

For more McClatchy politics coverage visit Planet Washington


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Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/08/04/v-print/2345391/stocks-plummet-dow-closes-down.html#ixzz1U9HeqoWV

desertpunk
August 9th, 2011, 11:26 PM
"Best market for the high-end since 2005-2006"

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