Florida Real Estate Blog

Florida Real Estate Blog

by Vincent Napoleon, Founder of Estates in Florida

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Florida Real Estate Craze

I found an interesting article that explains some of the reasons we are where we are in the Florida Real Estate Market. I thought I would share it with everyone. . .

Market Crashes: The Florida Real Estate Craze

The amount the market declined from peak to bottom: Land that could be bought for $800,000 could, within a year, be resold for $4 million before crashing back down to pre-boom levels. The prices were so inflated that to buy a condo-style property in 1926, you would've had to pay the same as you would now have to pay for a luxury home in the guard-gated communities in Miami ($4,500,000) - without adjusting for inflation!

Synopsis: In the 1920s, the United States of America was chugging along like the British Empire of the 1700s, and it was only natural that people were beginning to believe such prosperity was infinite. But it wasn't the stock market that was the recipient of a bubble. It was the real estate market.

In 1920, Florida became the popular U.S. destination/residence for people who don't like the cold. The population was growing steadily and housing couldn't match the demand, causing prices to double and triple in some cases, which was not exactly unjustified at this point. But, news of anything doubling and tripling in price always attracts speculators. So, once people began pumping huge amounts of money into the real estate market it took off. Soon everyone in Florida was either a real estate investor or a real estate agent.

Unfortunately, the rules are the same whether you pay too much for a stock or for a piece of land: you have to make that much more to claim a profit. This did happen for awhile, and land prices quadrupled in less than a year. Eventually, however, there were no "greater fools" to buy the disgustingly overpriced land, and prices began to adjust ever so subtly. Speculators realized there was a limit to the boom, and began to sell their properties to solidify their profits while they could.Then everybody simultaneously saw the writing on the wall, and panic selling ensued. With thousands of sellers and very few buyers, prices came down with a sickening thud, twitched a bit, and then crawled down even lower.


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Saturday, April 25, 2009

Coming Storm in Commercial Properties

The coming tsunami of commercial foreclosures is going to be larger than at any other time in
U S History. Is your commercial real estate / distressed property division ready.
I am taking the time to research the Commercial Market and studying how the owners along with the creditors are going to handle the huge rise in the vacancy rate not only in South West Florida but all over the US.
I feel we need to be in position to quickly and efficiently handle the large number of Commercial foreclosure deals that now seems inevitable. Through solid negotiation on the owners behalf; and a full-scale marketing plan, we are now coordinating efforts to assist many commercial investors.

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