Pages
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Government: First house price increase since 2007
WASHINGTON – May 23, 2012
U.S. house prices rose 0.6 percent in the first quarter of 2012 according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) seasonally adjusted purchase-only house price index (HPI).
HPI price changes are generally smaller than other indicators because they’re based on same-home selling prices for homes under government-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The purchase-only index is based on more than 6 million repeat sales transactions.
Comparing year-to-year, the seasonally adjusted house prices rose 0.5 percent compared to first quarter 2011.
Comparing month-to-month, FHFA’s seasonally adjusted monthly index for March was up 1.8 percent from February.
“Consistent with other housing market indicators, the FHFA HPI showed stronger house prices in the first quarter, most notably in March,” says FHFA Principal Economist Andrew Leventis. “Increased affordability and a somewhat smaller inventory of homes for sale are positively impacting house prices.”
Findings:
• The seasonally adjusted purchase-only HPI rose in the first quarter in 30 states and the District of Columbia.
• The top five annual increases were Hawaii (10.3 percent), Washington, DC (9.8 percent), Iowa (5.7 percent), Florida (4.7 percent) and North Dakota (4.4 percent).
• Of the nine census divisions, the Mountain division experienced the strongest prices in the latest quarter, posting a 1.4 percent increase. Prices were weakest in the New England division, where prices fell -0.7 percent.
© 2012 Florida Realtors®
New-home inventories shrinking | Inman News
Sales still slow, but up nearly 10 percent from a year ago
By Inman News, Wednesday, May 23, 2012.
Inman News®
Sales of new homes remain anemic by historic measures, but homebuilders have cut back so drastically on construction that new-home inventories are no longer bloated.
New single-family homes were selling at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 343,000 homes per year during April, up 3.3 percent from March and 9.9 percent from a year ago, the Census Bureau reported.
That represents a supply of 5.1 months at the current rate of sales, down from 5.2 months in March and an all-time high of 12.1 months in January 2009. Many analysts consider a six-month supply of homes an even balance of supply and demand.
Sales of new single-family homes exceeded 1 million per year from 2003 through 2006, dipping below 500,000 in 2008 for the first time since 1982. The 306,000 new homes sold last year was an all-time low in records dating back to 1963.
Monday, April 23, 2012
Low ball offers are just not cutting it anymore
WASHINGTON – April 23, 2012
When the number of home sellers grossly outpaces the number of buyers, no offer can be ignored, even if it’s 25 percent or more off the asking price. But in today’s rebounding market, those low-ball offers don’t often work. Many times, the potential buyer finds that they don’t get a counter-offer. And, in many cases, another more realistic buyer gets the home.
A low-ball offer – generally 25 or more off the asking price – allows buyers to see if they can land a great deal, even if they’re willing to pay more. In a survey last year conducted by the National Association of Realtors® (NAR), one in 10 respondents cited low-ball offers as a concern. According to real estate columnist Kenneth Harney, a NAR survey conducted in March and not yet released found that almost no one complained about low offers.
When the number of listings outpaced the number of buyers, many potential homeowners submitted a shockingly low offer on the theory that they had nothing to lose. If the seller balked, most would still counter with something below their asking price. Today, however, offers close to the asking price – or even beating it – will probably come in fairly quickly from someone else if a home is priced correctly in the first place.
Even buyers who still want to low-ball an offer on a home many times switch tactics after they lose a property or two to a more aggressive buyer.
Florida Realtor Marnie Matarese works with J Wood Realty in Sarasota. She told Harney that fewer buyers want to low-ball an offer in her area, but they still come in – mainly from out-of-state or out-of-the-country people who have read about the state’s foreclosures and short sales. That news, however, is old – it has not kept up with reality in many areas.
Matarese says some people still insist on making a low-ball offer, but that she doesn’t mind. “You can’t blame a buyer for trying to get a good deal,” she says.
In some cases, a seller isn’t offended by a low-ball offer, but their counter-offer shaves only a little bit off their original asking price. An Olympia, Wash., real estate agent had a $150,000 offer for a $250,000 listing, according to Harney. But after the dust settled and the seller shook off his irritation, he and the buyer agreed to $230,000.
Harney closed his column with this advice: “Rolling low-balls at sellers may have been an effective approach between 2008 and early 2011. But in 2012’s environment – at least in rebounding markets – it could be counterproductive if you truly want to buy.”
Source: Ken Harney. Distributed by Washington Post Writers Group. ©
2012 Florida Realtors®
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Florida Markets Dominate - Top Ten Turnaround Report
Though the past four years have seen many cities suffering from large numbers of foreclosures and a loss in home values, ten of these real estate markets are now leading the nation towards a general recovery and stability of the housing sector.
Realtor.com’s Top 10 Turnaround Town Report, based on third quarter 2011 data, includes six Florida markets: Miami, Orlando, Fort Myers-Cape Coral, Fort Lauderdale, Sarasota-Bradenton, and Lakeland-Winter Haven.
Each of these markets has experienced positive year-over-year median price appreciation, reductions in year-over-year median age of inventory and inventory counts, while also experiencing lower unemployment rates on a year-over-year basis. Florida’s success can also be tied to foreign buyers; the number of foreign buyers purchasing homes there increased from 10 percent in 2007 to 31 percent in 2011.
Let’s take a closer look:
Miami, FL: The number one town on the report, Miami has gone from being one of the first victims of the subprime crash to having a healthy inventory that is only half the size from a year ago. Today, Miami is only reporting one foreclosure for every 407 homes, compared to the national rate of one per every 213. And, condo sales have increased 79 percent in the first five months of this year, largely due to an influx of foreign investors.
Orlando, FL: Ranked second on the report, Orlando leads the nation in the ratio of Realtor.com searches to listings. Inventory has also obtained a balance with demand. Foreclosures hurt the market in 2007-08, but foreclosures in Orlando were down 58 percent in September, compared to last year.
Fort Myers-Cape Coral, FL: Median prices in Fort Myers-Cape Coral have increased almost 33% year-over-year, according to Realtor.com’s October 2011 Real Estate Trend Data. In addition, foreclosures are down–only one in 313 homes in September–while inventory has been reduced and foreign buyers have been attracted to the area’s real estate prices. The metro ranked third on the turnaround report.
Fort Lauderdale FL: A decrease in inventory coupled with an uptick in prices earns Fort Lauderdale the number five spot on the report. Inventory decreased almost 38 percent year-over-year, according to Realtor.com’s October data report. Prices have fallen about 46 percent since 2006, but are now going up.
Sarasota-Bradenton, FL: A total of 11 percent of all foreign buyers in Florida are in Sarasota-Bradenton specifically. Number six on the turnaround report, the market has seen a list prices increase of more than 17 percent year-0ver-year and a decrease of inventory of 32 percent according to the Realtor.com October data. The market still has a long way to go, after losing more than 55 percent of home values from 2006 to the second quarter of 2011 due to foreclosures.
Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL: A year ago, Lakeland-Winter Haven topped national foreclosure filing lists, but now the area’s distressed sale market share has decreased 46 percent. The area–ranked 7th on the turnaround list–has seen total listings decreased more than 36 percent year-over-year and median age of inventory decrease more than 17 percent, according to Realtor.com’s October data. Prices are also up 12 percent compared to last October.
Realtor.com’s Top Ten Turnaround Town Report is compiled using a formula based on price appreciation, changes in inventory, median age of inventory, searches by Realtor.com visitors, and unemployment data.
Check back in tomorrow for a closer look at the remaining four markets!
.
Read more: Florida Markets Dominate REALTOR.com Top Ten Turnaround Report | REALTOR.com® Blogs
Monday, June 6, 2011
Winn-Dixie Completes Aventura, Fla., Store Remodel

Excerpt from ProgressiveGrocer.com
Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. has completed renovations to its Aventura, Fla., store at 20417 Biscayne Blvd. The location now offers such new amenities as a vibrant, warm color palette updated in keeping with the chain’s latest design concepts; hardwood flooring throughout the produce, deli and bakery departments; manyadditional kosher items, including Israeli foods, pareve snacks, kosher meats and cheeses, fresh breads and customized specialty cakes; and a dedicated area with free Wi-Fi access and complimentary coffee.
“This store exemplifies our fresh and local strategy, and serves as a one-stop grocery destination catering to the needs, tastes and preferences of the surrounding community,” noted Randy Rambo, southern regional VP at Jacksonville, Fla.-based Winn-Dixie.
Among the additional features of the Aventura store are a bigger selection of the season’s freshest fruits and vegetables, a wood-burning rotisserie and custom-made sandwich shop in the deli department, a wide variety of meats carved to order in the full-service meat department, an assortment of seasonal merchandise and specialty gifts in the new floral department, and a greater offering of domestic and imported wines.
To mark the grand reopening, Winn-Dixie will hold a series of events throughout June, including live cooking demonstrations, food tastings, live entertainment, raffles and giveaways.
Winn-Dixie operates 484 retail grocery locations, including 379 in-store pharmacies, in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia and Mississippi.Sunday, June 5, 2011
The Tides - Hollywood Beach - Ocean Front/Ocean View
Great opportunity to own a direct ocean view/ocean front condominium
in Hollywood Beach Florida. This one bedroom features an updated kitchen
with newer appliances and berber carpet throughout the unit. The Tides
building offers a heated pool, gym, 24 hour security, lobby attendant, valet parking, business center, direct beach access, etc. The building is located close to shopping centers, supermarkets, restaurants and a 5 minute drive to Aventura Mall.





Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Related Group revises plan for new Brickell tower
Post from Miami Herald
The Related Group has plans for a new condominium project in Brickell, but the
project’s lack of a parking garage has sparked backlash in the neighborhood.
By TOLUSE OLORUNNIPA
tolorunnipa@MiamiHerald.com
Miami's top condominium developer is planning to emerge from the region's worst housing bust picking up where it left off before the economy tanked, and building a shiny new condo tower.
The Related Group, which built more than 15,000 South Florida condos during the housing boom, then found itself fighting off insolvency when the recession hit, is seeking city approval for a new 35 story condo building in Brickell.
Related is set to go before the city of Miami's Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board on Wednesday to pitch its new project, to be built at 30 SE 6th Street.
View map
Related's subsidiary, TRG Brickell Station TRG Brickell Station, originally received approval to use that site for a project called “Brickell Station,” in 2006. That condo tower, stalled because of the downturn, was planned to be nearly 600 feet tall, with 232 residences stacked on top of a parking garage.
The new plan scraps the 10-level parking garage, dropping the building’s height to 350 feet, and offers a new name: “My Brickell.” The expected dates for groundbreaking and completion are not listed in the application, and Related executives did not respond to requests for comment.
“To see Related and others move forward to build towers doesn’t surprise me, because it’s an arduous process,” said Peter Zalewski, a principal at CondoVultures, a Bal Harbour-based consultancy. “If you assume that construction takes 18 to 24 months, you start to look at roughly a 2014 delivery. I don’t know that that’s going to make sense two years from now, but if Related were able to build a tower without parking, they’d be able to reduce their costs tremendously.”
Zalewski added that of 22,000 new condos built in downtown Miami since 2003, about 3,200, or 14 percent, remain unsold.
Related’s condo application said it had made the changes to bring the project in line with the Miami 21 zoning code, a pedestrian-friendly development guide passed by the city in 2009, but the modifications have not been well received by some in the neighborhood.
The residents of several nearby buildings have protested Related’s plan to build 234 additional units without a parking garage.
Related’s condo application indicates that it would provide required parking by using leftover spaces in the parking garage at 500 Brickell, a twin-tower project the company developed adjacent to the My Brickell plot.
Condo owners at the 633-unit 500 Brickell protested by filing an appeal to the Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board, and a lawyer representing them said there simply are not enough spaces to accommodate nearly 200 more cars.
“There’s at least 100 missing parking spaces [needed] to accomplish what they want to accomplish,” said Carlos Gimenez, an attorney representing the associations for 500 Brickell’s two towers. “This would be a strain on all the surrounding buildings.”
Gimenez said that unit owners were upset that Related submitted its application, along with its plans to make use of the 500 Brickell parking lot, without consulting with residents at 500 Brickell.
At Wednesday’s 7 p.m. hearing, Gimenez said, the board will likely grant a “continuance,” so that all the parties involved can come to an agreement about the details of the new project.
Iris Escarra, an attorney representing Related’s subsidiary, did not return a call seeking comment.
Related’s founder, Jorge Perez, has often expressed grand ideas about transforming downtown Miami into a bustling metropolis, but those plans hit a snag during a housing downturn that cost his company $1 billion. As potential buyers walked away from their contracts amid a falling market, Related fell into danger of defaulting on dozens of bank loans in 2008 and 2009. The company eventually negotiated deals with all of its lenders, using a range of exit strategies that included so-called “friendly foreclosures,” property givebacks and cash payments.
Last year, Related emerged from its seventh and final troubled South Florida project, and claimed to be debt-free.
It has since focused on affordable housing projects, and development deals in emerging international markets. Still, the company has promised that it would return to build condos again in Miami.
“I still believe that we have massive amounts of work to be done for Miami to become a 24-hour city,” Perez said during a January interview with The Miami Herald. “I think we need to build a lot more residential. A lot more residential.”
Read more at Miami Herald