Sunday, March 18, 2012

Real Estate Coming Back?

Stay tuned for the latest update from the Realtor Par-Non.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Advertise, Advertise, Advertise


Real Estate today needs advertising. FSBO's need to go WAaaaaaay beyond classified ads. Classifieds don't get attention, they don't motivate and are simply too expensive for what you get...next to nothing.

Internet Video is the way to go. Go to 3 Minute Video Ads.com and find out how to advertise for free on Twitter, Google, Facebook, MySpace, Yahoo, CraigsList, and on and on and on.

Real Estate agents need to advertise their listings without going broke. Classified ads are dead. Internet video is the future. I can take still photos and turn them into an MPG-4 video that will produce the best quality possible on YouTube, GoogleVideos and AOLVideos. You don't even need a digital video camera. Just shoot a bunch of 640x480 still pics and they'll rock and roll on video!

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Here's Some Great So. Florida Condo News!


Everyone has been talking for a couple of years now about the 40,000 to 60,000 unsold condos in the Miami area. Many articles described the inventory as being huge. At the same time, some builders continue building luxury high-rise condos that continue to enjoy strong sales!





Check this article that was published on the Florida Association of Realtors website: Florida Association of Realtors reports:
[Its from Matthew Haggman of the Miami Hearld.]

Here's the article in it's entirety:

CLOSINGS AT DOWNTOWN MIAMI CONDOS HAVE GONE BETTER THAN MANY EXPECTED:

MIAMI – Nov. 24, 2008 – Miami’s latest building boom is creating 22,000 condominium units in the city’s urban center, more than double the number built in the past 40 years. [They're still building in Miami!!]

But the question everyone wants answered amid the real estate downturn is: How many have actually sold?

Seventy percent have found a buyer, according to a new study by condovultures.com, a real estate consultancy. But nearly a quarter of the condos – including some of the largest projects – built during the boom will be delivered over the next several months.

So far, 17,299 condos have been finished and 12,169 have closed at an average price of $405,966 per unit, adding up to total sales of nearly $5 billion in the greater downtown Miami area, which includes the Brickell, central business district and Midtown neighborhoods.

Those sales are better than many observers expected for a downtown area often viewed as ground zero for real estate speculation and excess, and it highlights Miami’s ongoing urban revitalization, fueled by people, builders and investors returning to the city center.

However, by year’s end, another 3,999 units are set to hit the market, and another 1,439 after that.

“South Florida developers have to be excited by the fact that more than two out of three downtown condo units have closed successfully,” said Peter Zalewski, principal at condovultures.com in Bal Harbour. “But some giant projects are coming, and they’re going to hit like a hurricane – the only question is what category storm?”

The massive projects include the three-tower, 1,800-unit ICON Brickell built between the bay and Brickell Avenue, which starts closings this month. The 342-unit EPIC rising alongside the Miami River also will start closings soon. Also coming are the 530-unit Mint at Riverfront, 459-unit Infinity at Brickell, and 346-unit Paramount Bay.

“We are bullish,” said Miroslav Mladenovic, vice president of Cabi Development, which started closings Thursday on its 848-unit Everglades on the Bay project along Biscayne Boulevard. “Comparable projects to ours have fared well; we don’t see why we can’t fare the same.”

A condo hotbed

Zalewski’s report, culled from a review of property records ending Sept. 30, covers the area between the Julia Tuttle and Rickenbacker causeways, and from I-95 to Biscayne Bay.

This swath of land has seen more development than any corner in Florida and is a closely watched sector in the broader housing market.

A month ago, the last of dozens of cranes erecting high-rise condos across downtown finally came down, signaling the end of the frenetic and historic boom. With few new residential projects planned, the next step is completing the structures and getting the units sold.

The new batch of condos is hitting the market as credit remains tight and existing home prices continue to fall due to a large inventory of unsold homes throughout South Florida.

Home sales, however, have picked up in recent months.

While many downtown builders pre-sold all of their units – buyers were typically required to plunk down 20 percent deposits, though some builders asked for 30 percent – the ongoing concern is how many buyers will ultimately come to the closing table and pay the remaining 70 to 80 percent.

A cottage industry of lawyers attempting to get buyers out of pre-construction contracts has emerged.

Despite ongoing buzz about vulture funds trolling the real estate market for bargains, the closings have largely occurred without such funds swooping in to buy up blocks of condos at a discount. The rare examples of such bulk deals have been developer-led. Related Group, for example, partnered with Philadelphia investor Lubert-Adler this year to spend $36 million on 146 units at 50 Biscayne, the 528-unit Biscayne Boulevard condo that’s now 100 percent closed, according to the condovulture.com report.

But that could change as the new round of closings for big condo projects begins at a time when developers face mounting pressures from lenders eager to see construction loans paid back. Indeed, the coming units could portend better deals for buyers and added pressure on downtown builders with outstanding loans and unsold units.

Hit and miss

So far the success of individual downtown buildings varies, according to the condovulture.com report.

For instance, the two-tower 528-unit One Miami at the mouth of the Miami River and 103-unit Loft I are 100 percent closed. The 348-unit Brickell on the River north tower is 98 percent closed. The 200-unit Ten Museum Park on Biscayne Boulevard and the 454-unit south tower at Quantum on the Bay next to Margaret Pace Park are 89 percent closed.

Turning to rentals

Yet, as of Sept. 30, the report found, the 635-unit Opera Tower, a few blocks north of the performing arts center, had closed only 35 percent of its units; the 498-unit Ivy along the Miami River had closed 32 percent; and the 91-unit Flagler First along Flagler Street just 28 percent.

Tibor Hollo, chairman of Florida East Coast Realty and builder of Opera Tower, said he has started renting units there.

“It’s a tough market, but we are getting closings,” said Inigo Ardid, vice president of Key International, who is building Ivy. He said closings at the condo tower have risen to 42 percent since Zalewski finished his report.

“It is a slow process. Instead of closing buildings in 40 or 45 days, it is taking six to eight months or longer,” Ardid said.

Copyright © 2008, The Miami Herald, Matthew Haggman. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Internet Video ads are CHEAP and they get major EXPOSURE.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Shhhhh....Good News In Jacksonville, Keep It A Secret!

While the media revels in bad news ("bad news is good news")there is secretely a current of growth going on in Jacksonville...Florida!

Deutsche Bank, the largest financial services firm in Germany and one of the largest in the world, is considering establishing an operations hub in Jacksonville that would create operations and technology jobs that support Deutsche Bank’s corporate, investment banking and asset and wealth management businesses.

With the proposed new hub, Deutsche Bank plans to create 1,000 new, full-time jobs by Dec. 31, 2011. The high-skill jobs will pay an annual average wage estimated at $49,200 plus benefits, or more than 115 percent of the statewide average wage, for an estimated annual payroll of $49.2 million.

James Bailey, owner publisher of Bailey Publishing in Jacksonville, recently summarized many new projects underway in Jacksonville:
1. OSK Mitsui is planning to use JAXPORT, TRAPAC container terminal which could create up to 6,000 new jobs and raise the volume through TRAPAC to over 800,000 containers a year.
2. Hanjin Shipping is going to build a new container terminal that will handle another 800,000 containers. This opens new shipping lines between the Far East, the US and Europe which may stimulate even more growth.
3. Alenia North America is going to build a final assembly and delivery center for the C27j Spartan cargo plane at Cecil Commerce Center. This will add another 300 new jobs and capital investments approaching $100 million.

So, what can we say about Jacksonville, "Jacksonville Rocks" and is continuing to rock.

If one were to drive around JIA, one would see gigantic new cargo warehouses, shopping centers, ingress and egress highways, telecommunications and other structures and infrastructures underway.

"Stiff upper lip old chap", Jacksonville may just come out of this mess better than the rest.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Jacksonville Beachside Cottage

Jacksonville Beach Cottage


Cute 3/3 just two blocks from the beach!

Smell the salt air, hear the ocean breakers,

the discerning executive has found her home!


 


Want to see some more great deals at the beach? Call Richard Newquist 904-422-5091

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Video Ads

Both the DNC and the RNC are making videos for YouTube for direct advertising as well as a sort of "encounter group" experience. They are saving millions of $$$$$ while getting the results they want.

We at Beach & Luxury Realty are offering the same service for a small fraction of the price that ANYONE pays...except for YOU, my customer!

Check out: Video Tours and 3 minute video ads.com for more information.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

First Time Home Buyers & Previous Owners Get Break Under Housing Recovery Act




Housing Bill Creates Great Environment for First-time Buyers, Says Richard Newquist, Real Estate Analyst in NE Florida.


The signing of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 by President Bush has opened the door to first homebuyers and previous homeowners who haven't owned for the past three years.

New benefits such as a repayable first-time home-buyer tax credit. First-time buyers are important to the health of the housing economy because their home purchases help to stimulate sales up the price points. Through the home-buyer tax credit, buyers who are purchasing for the first time or who haven’t owned a property in the last three years can now qualify for a tax credit equal to 10% of their home purchase price, up to $7,500.


The timeframe to buy is between April 9, 2008 and July 1, 2009. The credit phases out if the buyer’s income exceeds $75,000 for an individual or $150,000 for a couple filing jointly and it must be paid back over a 15 year period in equal installments. The credit can be claimed on the buyer’s 2008 tax return even if the purchase is made in 2009 (it’s important to note that this is a tax credit and not a tax deduction).


Another component of the housing bill is an FHA overhaul which allows Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to serve more home-buyers by raising loan limits in high cost areas above the standard conforming limit to 115 percent of the median house prices and up to 150 percent of the conforming loan limit.


"This Housing and Economic Recovery Act marks the beginning phase of the next ten-year housing cycle in which prices in the more affordable markets will only continue to appreciate", said Richard Newquist, long time real estate analyst now practicing in Jacksonville Florida.


Home loan proceedures have been reevaluated and some tightening has taken place especially in the area of down payment assistance by sellers which has now been ruled out as a source of funds.