Showing posts with label Miami Beach Real Estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miami Beach Real Estate. Show all posts

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Terra Beach Side in Miami Beach

Good Opportunities in one of the very few new buildings in Miami Beach.

Last Units for sale at reduced prices !!

Developer is selling remaining units at incredibly reduced prices.

Check with me at (954) 296-6741

Terra Beachside Villas offers contemporary living with architectural sophistication. Designed as one of Miami Beach's m
ost unique residential offerings, Terra is the definitive urban oasis, with access to the beach and the Intracoastal.

Floor plans are exotically named:

Fire

Water

Wind

Earth

all with generous living space.

Each unit has been designed with volumes of space & light combined in grand proportion on-site, ranging from 1,095 square feet for the 1-Bedroom residences up to 3,495 square feet for the 3 story residences.

Terra Beachside Villas features a spectacular 400 foot long Zen-like garden enclosed by a translucent arched roof atrium.

Amenities include a unique cone-shaped clubhouse with walls of water-colored glass, full equipped fitness center and swimming pool.

Residents also enjoy a private beach club membership and access to a private marina across the street at Terra's sister properties Cabana and 6000 Indian Creek.

AMENITIES:

Steps from the Beach

Landscaping designed by EGS2, Bill Eager, ASLA, Landscape Architect

Reflection Pool

Tropical landscaped pool deck and grounds

Heated swimming pool

Pool deck with pool furniture restrooms facilities

Secured access parking garage

Mail Room

Building designed by award winning firm of Sieger Suarez Architectural Partnership.

3-Level Recreation - spa, aerobics, meeting areas

Exquisite Grand - 6 Story Atrium

Controlled Atrium Access

Spectacular Porte-Cochere


KITCHENS:

- Miele self-cleaning oven

- Miele ceramic cooktop

- Miele built-in exhaust hood

- Miele lift board

- Miele Incognito dishwasher

- KitchenAid microwave

- 30" Sub-Zero refrigerator/freezer

- Franke Style Vision Sink

- Franke accessories

- Cooking wall with stainless steel/glass lift doors

- Rolling server

- Rolling island storage drawers

- Stainless steel storage bins

- Stainless steel back splash

BATHS:

- European spa inspired

- Hansgrohe and Duravit appointments

- Dual shower sets with seat

- Dual hand-held body sprays

- Countertop wash basin

- Bidet

- Glass shelf and stainless steel towel bar

- Stainless steel and glass vanity

- Storage cabinet



Henry B. Nathan is a Realtor at United Realty Group Inc.


Visit my websites:

Condo-southflorida.com

GoldenIsles-homes.com


Thursday, December 04, 2008

The Fallout of a condo conversion

Reflections on a case study.

Just two or three years ago, some of the hot products that we could offer as affordable housing were these condo conversion communities, so popular in Miami and Broward counties. There seemed the best deals available; the developers provided assistance by offering office space to loan officers from mortgage companies and banks, so they could directly assist their buyers in securing the loans.

These were the happy times of the 100% financing, with developers assuming all closing costs, countless “incentives” such as paying off the first six months or the first year of condo maintenance fees, “upgrading” the converted condos with stainless steel appliances, redoing the floors, the cabinets, you name it.

The condo conversions are basically rental properties with a few or hundreds of apartments, which are bought by a developer. Going through legal procedures, making some required physical work on the property, would allow the investors to change the legal status of the rental community from one property to many independently owned “condominium units”.

Starting around 2000/2001, this was one of the hottest markets for builders and real estate investors. Properties bought at an average of $ 60,000 or $70,000 per unit, (this is just an example), would be sold at prices hovering in the $ 200,’s to $250’s and even more. Commissions paid to real estate agents were attractive and everybody seemed quite happy with the situation. Key elements were the organizations put together by the developers to market and sell their products, as well as the surprising complacency of the lenders.

Buyers seemed happy. Buyers signed the developers’ contracts with small deposits, which often left no room for mortgage contingency after 30 days. But in general, everything moved smoothly and new homeowners were happily occupying these units by the thousands. Everybody thought that it was a wonderful way of “accomplishing the American dream of homeownership”. This went on till about the end of 2006, dragging through the first months of 2007.

Fast forward to November 2008. I get a call from a prospective client who wants to be shown a condo she located on my website. I review the listing and find out that it is situated in a well-known condo conversion in Pembroke Pines , which name I remembered from the height of the “bubble”. In 2006, a two-bedroom unit at this community was selling at around $ 250,000.

The prospective buyer pointed out three more listings in the same complex.
All four units are short sales or bank-owned foreclosures.
I set up the showings and meet my client at the place.
I notice immediately a profusion of signs on many units: mainly AUCTIONS posters, foreclosure notices, real estate “for sale” signs. It looked like almost everything there was for sale.
I show the condos and in many of them, close to the back doors, small ant’s mounds were the sign of blight and abandon. Some of the units hadn’t been occupied for months, as evidenced by the state of carpets and bathrooms.

The area is convenient; the general condition of the buildings is good. So what’s wrong?

The actual asking prices varied between around $ 90,000 to $ 110,000. After talking to the listing agents, I have the impression that they hadn’t received too many offers and my feeling is that these places could go for as low or even less than $ 80,000.

That’s about a third of what they were selling a little more than two years ago. Unbelievable? Not quite. That’s the point.

Who can afford these modest $ 80,000 homes? Traditionally, and as per the criteria of Fannie Mae, somebody whose family income hovers in the monthly gross $3,000. (No more than 28% of the gross income can be dedicated to pay for the monthly mortgage, insurance, taxes)
When they were valued at $ 250,000, this monthly income should have been in the $7,000. Otherwise, buyers could have been in trouble sooner or later. But nobody was paying attention, apparently

And this is the real problem.

People who can only afford $80,000 homes, living in $80,000 homes, but having to pay $250,000 mortgages.

Consequences? Many choose to run away. Not only because they feel cheated, but because they make just enough money to pay for an $80,000 home.

Did you get it yet?

Weird? As in most business transactions, when somebody loses, somebody else wins. Let’s analyze this.

The real winners:

- Investors, who purchased large rental properties and converted them to condos at the beginning of the “boom”, sold them very quickly, with high profits. Often after some basic improvements, and large amounts of paperwork, they would convert rentals previously valued at 60 or 80,000 dollars, into units that sold at $ 200,000 and more. These apartments were giving a fair return on their investments to their previous owners, who grabbed the chance to cash on the valuation of their property after many stagnant years.

- Other winners: Mortgage brokers, mortgage bankers, appraisers, who got fat fees and commissions.

In the second and third round of this “bubble”, things gradually changed. Developers started to increase their commissions to attract realtors, frantically arrange easy loans, and put together all kind of creative “incentives.”

Those developers who moved fast managed to sell out. The rest was stuck with a large percentage of their condos, and then their financing banks started to worry.
The last phase was fairly recent: banks foreclosing on developers of dozens of properties, or at least on the high percentage of unsold units.

Of course that due to many different situations I cannot generalize and simplify. Many appraisers, realtors, mortgage brokers, banks were the beneficiaries while it lasted. They had cooperated with these savvy developers who made most of the profit.

The big losers?

- Those homeowners who had bought and walked away, leaving the bank to foreclose on their mortgages, experienced an irreparable damage to their credit that will compromise for a long time their ability to purchase again a home.
- Real estate investors, who bought properties, hoping to get rich by “flipping” in the short term. Many of them let the banks foreclose. They have paid for some time the mortgage, the taxes, and the maintenance fees. At a certain point, they have given up.
- The banks and mortgage lenders, of course, who will recover only a small percentage of their loans.
- Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and other GSE’s who bought these mortgages.
- The buyers of all the bonds and other real-estate-related financial instruments; which could be foreign banks, a hedge fund, a sovereign-fund from an oil-rich country, or a Singapore investor.

Who is guilty?

A key element was the acceptance by lending institutions of unreasonable increases in appraisal values, which had no basis other than speculation.
Nothing can explain that a home built 30 years ago increases 300% in value in a two-or-three-years period. Nothing can validate it.

Of course that the process fed on itself, causing inflationary building costs, but this was not at all sufficient to justify the incredible raise in the appraisals. Banks took the word of appraisers for granted, ignoring common sense. It was enough that two properties in the same neighborhood had sold at unusually and speculative high prices to allow an appraiser to use them in his “comparative analysis”. And from then on, every house in the area could automatically be the beneficiary of a new value based on this “analysis”, and so forth.

Banks would not object on the evident fallacy, and loans kept originating at a maddening pace. Buyers who had never saved a penny for a down payment, were granted homes they couldn’t afford, thanks to negative-amortization loans that would let them live in their new homes for a couple of years, until the inevitable happened. Naturally, mortgage brokers, lenders agents, everybody, would go along and perhaps encourage these appraisals. What about these “no-income-verification” loans? Did anybody doubt that they could sometime become the perfect instrument of deceit, fraud, and misrepresentation? Complicity? Collusion?

How many objections did we hear from Fannie and Freddie, the most expert institutions in the US on mortgage matter? How many voices of reason from Wachovia, Countrywide or Bank of America? Their executives were perhaps too busy showing their shareholders their prodigious short-term balance-sheet results, and cashing their even more prodigious bonuses, while ignoring the fundamentals.

It was a vicious and unending circle of madness, which results we are living now.


Henry B. Nathan is a Florida Real Estate Professional. Please visit my website to search for

Florida Condos, Hallandale Condos, Aventura Condos, Hollywood Condos, Sunny Isles Condos

Monday, November 03, 2008

Books and Readings

At the dawn of a new presidential term, and with no intentions of venting out my political preferences, I find it important to spread around interesting ideas which can help explain what has gone wrong in our country and our economy and what new directions are being suggested to rebuild our nation’s wealth and success and regain our position as world leaders.

A provocative book that have drawn my attention is:

The Predator State:

How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too.

By James K. Galbraith.

Without endorsing its contents ( I am far from being an economist) I found some answers to the agonizing questions of how to save capitalism and a free society after the cataclysmic events that threatens to throw us back to depression-like poverty and hardship.

Here is a synopsis of The Predator State:

The cult of the free market has dominated economic policy-talk since the Reagan revolution of nearly thirty years ago. Tax cuts and small government, monetarism, balanced budgets, deregulation, and free trade are the core elements of this dogma, a dogma so successful that even many liberals accept it. But a funny thing happened on the bridge to the twenty-first century. While liberals continue to bow before the free-market altar, conservatives in the style of George W. Bush have abandoned it altogether. That is why principled conservatives -- the Reagan true believers -- long ago abandoned Bush.

Enter James K. Galbraith, the iconoclastic economist. In this riveting book, Galbraith first dissects the stale remains of Reaganism and shows how Bush and company had no choice except to dump them into the trash. He then explores the true nature of the Bush regime: a "corporate republic," bringing the methods and mentality of big business to public life; a coalition of lobbies, doing the bidding of clients in the oil, mining, military, pharmaceutical, agribusiness, insurance, and media industries; and a predator state, intent not on reducing government but rather on diverting public cash into private hands. In plain English, the Republican Party has been hijacked by political leaders who long since stopped caring if reality conformed to their message.

Galbraith follows with an impertinent question: if conservatives no longer take free markets seriously, why should liberals? Why keep liberal thought in the straitjacket of pay-as-you-go, of assigning inflation control to the Federal Reserve, of attempting to "make markets work"? Why not build a new economic policy based on what is really happening in this country?

The real economy is not a free-market economy. It is a complex combination of private and public institutions, including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, higher education, the housing finance system, and a vast federal research establishment. The real problems and challenges -- inequality, climate change, the infrastructure deficit, the subprime crisis, and the future of the dollar -- are problems that cannot be solved by incantations about the market. They will be solved only with planning, with standards and other policies that transcend and even transform markets.

A timely, provocative work whose message will endure beyond this election season, The Predator State will appeal to the broad audience of thoughtful Americans who wish to understand the forces at work in our economy and culture and who seek to live in a nation that is both prosperous and progressive.

The cult of the free market has dominated economic policy-talk since the Reagan revolution of nearly thirty years ago. Tax cuts and small government, monetarism, balanced budgets, deregulation, and free trade are the core elements of this dogma, a dogma so successful that even many liberals accept it. But a funny thing happened on the bridge to the twenty-first century. While liberals continue to bow before the free-market altar, conservatives in the style of George W. Bush have abandoned it altogether. That is why principled conservatives -- the Reagan true believers -- long ago abandoned Bush.

Enter James K. Galbraith, the iconoclastic economist. In this riveting book, Galbraith first dissects the stale remains of Reaganism and shows how Bush and company had no choice except to dump them into the trash. He then explores the true nature of the Bush regime: a "corporate republic," bringing the methods and mentality of big business to public life; a coalition of lobbies, doing the bidding of clients in the oil, mining, military, pharmaceutical, agribusiness, insurance, and media industries; and a predator state, intent not on reducing government but rather on diverting public cash into private hands. In plain English, the Republican Party has been hijacked by political leaders who long since stopped caring if reality conformed to their message.

Galbraith follows with an impertinent question: if conservatives no longer take free markets seriously, why should liberals? Why keep liberal thought in the straitjacket of pay-as-you-go, of assigning inflation control to the Federal Reserve, of attempting to "make markets work"? Why not build a new economic policy based on what is really happening in this country?

The real economy is not a free-market economy. It is a complex combination of private and public institutions, including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, higher education, the housing finance system, and a vast federal research establishment. The real problems and challenges -- inequality, climate change, the infrastructure deficit, the subprime crisis, and the future of the dollar -- are problems that cannot be solved by incantations about the market. They will be solved only with planning, with standards and other policies that transcend and even transform markets.

A timely, provocative work whose message will endure beyond this election season, The Predator State will appeal to the broad audience of thoughtful Americans who wish to understand the forces at work in our economy and culture and who seek to live in a nation that is both prosperous and progressive.


Henry B. Nathan is a Florida Realtor at United Realty Group Inc.Visit my website: http://www.condo-southflorida.com/where you can search for Aventura Condos, Florida Condos

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Bailing out the idiots
...or is there something fishy?

It's amusing, but I don't feel like smiling.

It would be funny if it didn't look very suspicious. The background of the bank crisis makes this case quite eye-opening. It illustrates some of the incredible things that are happening in the real estate and mortgage markets, while our government is embarking on the largest bailout in history.

I am a licensed Florida realtor. In July 2008, one of my clients called me to place an offer on a condo listed in the MLS by another realtor. Located in Hollywood, it was listed for sale at $238,000.

I called the listing agent and he informed me that it was a SHORT SALE, which, as you know, means that the mortgage lender is willing to take a loss. Some time ago, the bank had refused an offer for $ 250,000 but, after a few months, the situation had deteriorated so much that they had lowered their price and would be very open to negotiations.

At the request of my customer, I put immediately presented an offer of $199,000 CASH, with no contingency, which was transmitted to the bank by the listing agent. As required, we provided the bank with the proof of liquid funds that my clients had ready to close.

I did not hear from the bank. I periodically checked with the listing agent who had the contact with the bank. He kept telling me that the bank was silent and had not replied yet.
He told me a couple of times that our offer was the only one and that he hoped that the deal would go through.

About a week ago, I called him again. This time the news was different. The listing agent told me that the bank had foreclosed on the property. Then, the bank gave it to another realtor for sale and it was placed on the Realtors MLS system. Very quickly, the bank got some offers and signed a contract to sell it for $155,000.

I called the new listing agent who is selling the foreclosed condo.
He tried to explain that what looked funny was "usual" since banks have 2 separate divisions, one for foreclosures and the second for short sales, and that they don't act in a coordinate manner. I don't buy into this foolishness. I am sure that a simple note in the file would have made clear to anybody involved in the bank that there was a solid cash offer for $199,000.

The bottom line is that there is no reason why a bank can foreclose on a property where they had an offer to sell for $199,000 and instantly list it (after foreclosure) and sell it for $155,000. That evidently would increase the loss of the bank by $44,000 plus the usual foreclosure expenses. That is an additional loss of about 22%

Later on, I had a conversation with the listing agent who had handled my short-sale offer and he was evidently distressed since he had worked with the seller for a long time, getting offers for up to $250,000 which were systematically ignored or refused by the lender. The outstanding debt was apparently of about $ 288,000. That meant a loss of a little more than 10% on the loan. The bank ended up taking an almost 50% loss. This is one of the major banks. It might be a peanuts case, compared to the hundred of billions these big banks are holding in their portfolios, but still a significant example.

The seller had apparently tried to save his property from foreclosure by selling another apartment, and keep paying his mortgage. But, later on, he opted to put it in short sale hoping to minimize the loan default and salvage his credit.

The realtor told me that after this experience he was considering retiring from this business.

This is not about the loss of a commission by me and the other agent.
Frankly speaking, the point is that this smells very "fishy".

The whole situation could only be one of two things. Complete stupidity, or fraud. Actually I wouldn't worry too much about a bank mishandling their business. But at this point, our whole banking system is being "bailed out" with taxpayers' money and we have the right to know.

Traditionally, there was a fairly transparent way of conducting sales and purchases of real estate. Lately, a very different environment is encountered by many professionals, and some of us fear that, even when people are losing their homes and our whole economy is deeply troubled, some persons or organizations could be involved in unscrupulous dealings.

Although I am not making any accusation, this case is, in my opinion, very strange. Of course, there is also the strong possibility that it's just one more instance of the banking mess, and that this is a case of plain bureaucratic stupidity.

Will our money be used to bail out this kind of businesses?

October 11th, 2008


Henry B. Nathan is a Realtor in South Florida. Please visit my website and search of the top real estate database. Great Search Tools will make your search enjoyable and successful. http://www.condo-southflorida.com

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Hampton South Condominiums - Aventura

Hampton South Condos in Aventura

One of the first alternative that I would present to buyers looking for a newly constructed, luxury condominium buildings in Aventura, and very large floorplans, will always be the Hampton South complex.


Hampton South has become the archetype of the most luxurious condominium buildings in Aventura.

Great design, magnificent lobby, elegance and luxurious functionality.

Check the listings at Hampton South:






Very large floorplans are a unique feature.


Every unit has a private elevator with direct entry.

The unique design offers flow-through units with great views:





Views:


To the north, Waterfront views of North Aventura and Golden Isles over the Intracoastal.

To the west, Aventura green landscape and Golf Courses;

To the east, views of the Intracoastal, Ocean over Golden Beach.

Some of the amenities:

Tennis Courts
Pool
Spa
Fitness Center
Club House
Business Center
Basketball
Storage




Henry B. Nathan is a Florida Realtor at United Realty Group Inc.Visit my website: http://www.condo-southflorida.com/where you can search for Aventura Condos, Florida Condos,