Pages
Archives
- August 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- March 2010
- December 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
Posts Tagged ‘tenanted property florida’
Answer: Florida isn´t a giant property bubble like Dubai.
A property boom didn´t just appear in the Sunshine State out of the blue. The real estate market was tipping along quite nicely based on firm fundamentals between 1990 - 2002 prior to the unprecedented buying binge that occurred worldwide from 2003-2006.
A high quality of life, lots of space, great schools, universities and employment opportunities, a diverse and high tech economy encompassing large multinationals and government agencies of every description, a world class financial and tourism sector - all these played a part in attracting wave after wave of honest-to-goodness professional workers relocating permanently.
Guess what? They´re still here. If you know where these people live, work, play and go to university you are well on your way to making a wise investment decision. These are the locations where our target market of middle class professionals rent and buy their first homes. Siesta Lago is one of them. The people renting and buying here will provide a safe and stable exit strategy.
If you like the idea of purchasing a property that used to cost $200,000 but now sells for $70,000 and rents out at an 8% net yield - you really should start looking now. If you click on this Siesta Lago link and complete a short enquiry form, all information will be sent to you automatically.
In conclusion, prices aren´t falling anymore in the areas we source property - it is the supply that is falling. The window of opportunity to purchase a) in the best areas and b) at the bottom of the market will probably close sooner than a lot of industry commentators think.
Speaking of which, we´d love to hear YOUR views on the market via our blog comment and feedback forms.
Until next time
Colin
A strategic default is when a person decides to stop repaying their mortgage even when they can afford to continue doing so. Why would somebody do that? You´ll lose your home and your good credit history will be badly damaged.
If you dig a little deeper, the logic becomes apparent.
Let me illustrate by way of an example. Mr Smith bought a 3 bed condo in a nice residential area of Orlando in 2006 for $260,000 and he took out a $230,000 mortgage which is costing $1500 per month to service. He has a nice job and has no problem paying $1500 per month.
However, he knows that half a dozen identical 3 bed condos in his community, which weren´t sold in 2006 have recently been purchased by cash buyers for $99,900 each and they´re renting out for $1000 per month. When you take the interest into account, his mortgage is probably 4 times the size of the current market rates for that property. So he decides to stop paying his mortgage and instead saves $1500 per month.
It takes the bank 9 months to get round to kicking him out, during which time he lives rent free. After he gets kicked out, he simply rents one of the identical condos around the corner and pays $1000 per month to his landlord. He won´t get a mortgage or a car loan for 3-7 years, but he doesn´t particularly care as he´s done nothing illegal, he´s free of that huge 20 year debt and he doesn´t mind renting for a while.
The moral hazard that traditionally prevented people from doing this is disappearing fast. Ten years ago, a person who got kicked out of his house for not paying a mortgage would feel huge shame and embarrassment. His friends and family would pity him and quietly shake their heads at how bad things had turned out in his life. Not anymore. In 2011 an increasing amount of these neighbours will be wondering how they can do it too.
In the USA, in Ireland, in the UK and lots of other countries, it is becoming socially acceptable to stop paying your mortgage. People will understand and won´t think much worse of you. In the US, they might even admire the way you got yourself out of a huge debt. There are now lots of websites offering casual and professional advice to people that want to default on their loans and declare bankruptcy.
What are the consequences of these defaulters?
As you might expect, lenders in the USA hate the fact that a person can choose to walk away from their mortgage. There is no law against doing it. These lenders are lobbying HARD to get the rules changed so that people don´t have an incentive to walk away. For example, they´d like it if a strategic defaulter couldn´t get another loan for 20-30 years instead of 3-7 years. That would prevent a lot of them from doing it.
It´s not easy to prove strategic default though - you´d need to show beyond a reasonable doubt that the person wasn´t suffering financial hardship when they stopped paying their mortgage. Imagine a bank trying to do that to 5000 customers. Better still, imagine a state court system trying to handle 10 banks doing it to 50,000 customers.
Additionally, nobody knows what percentage of people are defaulting because they´re broke versus people defaulting because they don´t feel like repaying a debt bigger than the value of their home. Come to think of it, there isn´t even an official definition for a strategic defaulter.
One thing is for certain though. With the previous chaos in the market abating and the supply of distressed stock dwindling (see graphs above), they represent one of the few ways which will continue to generate discounted houses that investors can pounce on. The flip side is that if it becomes too big a problem, I think loop holes will be closed and people will no longer be incentivised to do it.
Don´t expect the authorities to announce a date for closing these loopholes either - they´ll just do it and tell you afterwards. Otherwise, people would simply rush to default before a deadline.
So, I think I can safely predict that when banks finally restructure their property portfolios and the levels of foreclosures slow to a manageable trickle, they´ll start lending to normal people again. That´s when property prices in the popular areas will start increasing and that could conceivably happen this year.
Regards
Colin
Florida has been very good to Torcana his year with many successful launches under our belts (with Mosaic, Arbor Lakes & Sabal Point being the standouts).
More will follow in early January as we continue to source high end condos with bulk discounts in affluent middle class areas that are pre tenanted by local professionals. Net yields will generally be 8% and prices 70% below peak rates.
Early in the new year we will bring other US products to the market including a variety of bespoke services for investors seeking to purchase multiple units (please get in touch if you´d like to know more).
Lies, damn lies and statistics (Disraeli)
I´ve had US housing numbers coming out my ears this year and I´m going try and ignore them for the next two weeks. For those who don´t want to watch Harry Potter or Willy Wonka on television, there´s no shortage of housing statistics on the USA market available online.
I´ll just give you two graphs in this newsletter though, one which shows the inventory in Orlando over the last 3 years and other which shows new contracts issued in Orlando during the same period.
Off the top of my head, I can think of half a dozen Housing Ministers in the EU and elsewhere that would sell their grannies for stats like these.
|
|
|
Warm Regards Colin |
Florida has spent most of the past 10 years near the top of many Irish & British buyers list of places to purchase holiday homes and property investments.
According to a recent survey carried out by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) and our own anecdotal evidence from the ground, the international buyer has never been more important in Florida but they are being led not by the British and Irish, but by the Canadians.
Torcana has never had a bigger variety of international clients than we have now. For example, we sold 25 properties to 7 different nationalities in October this year in Sabal Point alone, which included Americans, Canadians, Spaniards, Swedes, Germans and of course, British and Irish.
According to the NAR survey, 36% of international buyers in Florida were Canadian, followed by 16% in Latin America, 15% in the UK and 14% from the rest of Europe.
Setting aside Florida´s natural strengths as a holiday, retirement and investment destination, the combination of a huge drop in property prices (up to 70% from 2007 prices) and a weak US dollar are attracting huge numbers of international clients whose pounds, dollars and euro have never stretched so far.
Another key trend we´ve noticed among our key overseas buyers is the disappearance of the new property purchase and the dominance of the cash buyer. Agents and developers who are depending on sales of brand new properties and/or sales to buyers who need mortgages are in for a very tough time on both counts. There simply isn´t a demand for it.
The statistics bear this out: 81% of all international buyers and 73% of UK buyers in Florida paid for their properties with cash (i.e. no mortgage financing) while 89% of all international buyers and 81% of UK buyers purchased a second hand rather than a new home. These are both enormous changes from just 3 years ago.
The typical two bed apartment we are selling now for $65,000 to cash buyers would have been previously sold for $195,000 to buyers availing of cheap finance. These are prime properties in great locations which can be sold either vacant or with a tenant already in place, depending on whether the buyer is a pure investor or somebody seeking a holiday home.
So it would seem that the buying opportunities are still there for those with the means and ends to get them.
Just don´t be surprised to see keen eyed Canadians and Latin Americans joining you in the taxi queue at Orlando International Airport next time you pay the Sunshine State a visit…
Regards
Colin
On the otherhand, if I was selling or buying real estate in Brazil, Mexico, Canada or Australia, I´d be quite worried about how sudden currency movements could severely disrupt carefully laid out investment plans.
Levity aside, we do seem to be in the middle of a period where a burst bubble, record house price lows, high rental yields and a falling US dollar are all combining to make a terrific buying opportunity for the right kind of real estate in fundamentally sound locations like Florida.
Regards
Colin
In my previous blog, I listed some examples of how respected organisations like the BBC, Irish Times and Business Week can give US housing a big thumbs up in one month and a big thumbs down just a few short weeks later.
The reason, as I mentioned, was because the looked at housing trends over a period of weeks rather than months or years. In addition to that, those particular weeks (between June-July 2010) were particuraly volitile because homebuyers were rushing to meet a government imposed deadline.
The well publicised first time homebuyers credit expired on June 30 and so a property sale must be completed by that date if the new owner wanted to get his or her tax credit. As any economist would easily have predicted, the average for June and July was normal, but sales that would have naturally closed in July were pushed forward to June.
And so, June sales were higher than they should have been “Sharp jump!” and July sales were lower than they should have been “Record low!“
Let´s take Tampa Florida as an example (which is near our stunning Waterside at Coquina Key development).
If you look at the June (2155) and July (1486) sales for 2010, they average 1820 sales per month. Sales in June and July 2009 were 1876 and 1885 each. Sales in June and July 2008 were 1481 and 1431 each.
Nothing too exciting there - this year was same as last year and much better than 2008. The expiry of the tax credit simply meant that June and July this year are particularly bad months to examine housing trends.
The six monthly figures for Tampa are a little more useful
Feb-July 2008: 9,497 sales
Feb-July 2009: 9,651 sales
Feb-July 2010: 10,731 sales
Doesn´t exactly lend itself to dramatic headlines does it?
The national figures are even more illustrative. There were 4.58 million properties available for sale in July 2008. In July 2010 there was 3.98 million. In other words, even with record foreclosures in the past two years, there were so many people buying properties that housing inventory levels had fallen by 600,000.
Let´s look at an even longer timeframe (and I´ll stop boring you with stats after this!). Even allowing for a poor July, Annual housing sales in the USA should be approx 5 million in 2010. To place in perspective, annual sales averaged 4.9 million in the past 20 years, and 4.4 million over the past 30 years.
The point I´m trying to make is that comparisons always need to be put into perspective and useful ones are always over a longer time frame.
You don´t have to be Warren Buffett to realise that reacting to monthly movements in activity and price levels makes for exciting headlines but it is unlikely to make you rich. You´d be better off researching a few things very well, making a medium to long term plan, and then sticking with it.
That´s what Torcana do in Florida, and investors have very kindly started to thank us for it online.
Kind Regards
Colin
Good afternoon all
We are very excited to be launching a brand new project on Florida’s Space Coast.
The development is called Villas at LaCita: the location is stunning, the prices are terrific (from $53,000) and the rental yields on the best units are a rock solid 7-8%.
Like our previous Madison, Tradewinds, Waterside and Flora Ridge developments, these are high quality tenanted units with long term leases in place & available to investors at up to 75% below previous sales prices. You’ll find full details by visiting http://tinyurl.com/torcana-lacita
Kind Regards
Colin Murphy
Torcana.com


