Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Investors becoming the new landlords

Investors becoming the new landlords

FORT MYERS, Fla. – April 25, 2012 – Gene Richards is a lifelong Vermonter, but on a recent weekday afternoon he found himself back on Florida’s west coast, scouting foreclosures to add to the collection of rental properties he has amassed in the wake of the housing crisis.

“I just started buying them and I haven’t stopped. I have 15 right now, and I’d buy another 15,” said Richards, 51, who runs a mortgage company and also owns rental properties back home in Burlington, Vt. “This to me is a no-brainer of an investment.”

With home prices at historic lows and rental rates on the rise, Richards and a growing number of investors with cash to spare are seeking lucrative returns by gobbling up foreclosures in distressed markets across the country and turning them into rentals.

“The investors are seeing bargain opportunities,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors. “The numbers are just very attractive, given the alternatives.”

The real estate data firm CoreLogic estimated in a report this month that the burgeoning foreclosures-to-rental business could become a $100 billion industry this year as bigger investors get involved in hard-hit markets from Florida to California to Arizona to the Midwest.

Yun cited a recent NAR survey that shows sales of investment homes soared nearly 65 percent in 2011 over the previous year. By contrast, the number of purchases by owners who intended to occupy the homes fell more than 15 percent.

Those numbers reflect the fact that investors often have the ability to purchase in bulk and with cash, bypassing the need to rely on credit approval from banks. But the survey also suggests that the combination of bargain prices and a steady stream of rental income seems more attractive to many investors than having their money languish in banking accounts or bonds.

Of course, the speculators who furiously acquired properties and flipped them in search of quick profits played a key role in fueling the housing bubble that wrecked the U.S. economy. But for the moment, Yun believes, the current investor boom in turning foreclosures into rentals could actually help to heal the ailing housing market.

“In the current market situation, I would say the investors are very helpful. …We don’t want to see foreclosed properties linger. The investors are clearing this inventory out of the system,” Yun said. “Investors during the bubble years were not helpful; they were just adding fuel to the fire. But now they’re playing a stabilizing role.”

In the past, the investors willing to buy bank-owned, single-family homes and turn them into rentals predominately were individuals or mom-and-pop outfits with only a handful of properties. They’re still in the mix, but larger players have entered the business, and even larger ones – including hedge funds and private equity firms – have said they plan to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in such properties.

California-based Waypoint Homes has amassed about 1,300 rental houses in California since the business began in 2008 and has begun expanding into Phoenix.

“We’re not looking at this as a short-term opportunity in a distressed market,” said Waypoint co-founder Colin Wiel, noting that some large hedge funds and private equity funds are looking to spend hundreds of millions of dollars going into the single-family rental business. “There’s so much big capital that’s so eager to get into this space. It’s the emergence of an enormous industry.”

In the Washington area, investor Dan Magder recently left his job with the private equity firm Lone Star Funds to start the District-based Rock Creek Capital Group and focus on the single-family rental business. He has partnered with Greenlet Investments of Texas, which owns hundreds of homes throughout the South, and he expects to spend as much as $200 million in coming years buying foreclosures, renovating them and renting them out.

“There are a tremendous amount of these homes that are going to be sitting there. At the same time, you have many people who were in these homes who are looking for a place to live,” Magder said, adding that between rising rents and low vacancy rates, “the financial proposition starts to look good.”

Banks and lenders currently own 634,282 distressed properties across the country, a 16-month supply at the current sales pace, according to RealtyTrac. An additional 717,874 properties are in the foreclosure process but have not yet been repossessed.

In February, the federal agency that oversees government-backed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced its intention to hold bulk sales of about 2,500 foreclosed homes in some of the nation’s hardest-hit areas, such as Las Vegas, Chicago, Atlanta and parts of Florida. The program could expand if successful.

The following month, Bank of America announced that it will test a pilot program to allow as many as 1,000 struggling homeowners to hand over the deed but stay in their homes and rent from the firm. The bank said it will work with property management companies to maintain the homes and eventually sell them to investors.

Some housing advocates say the idea of hedge funds and other large investors becoming large-scale landlords raises red flags. Will they abide by fair-housing laws? Will they actually maintain the homes or just slap on a coat of paint and ignore tenants until it’s time to sell?

“It’s a whole different thing than an apartment building, where all of your tenants are in one place. The fact that you have properties that may be scattered across a metropolitan area has its own set of challenges,” said Deborah Goldberg, special projects director for the National Fair Housing Alliance. “We’ve never been in this kind of situation before where you have so many vacant properties in so many places.”

The Federal Reserve recently issued a policy statement about bank-owned rental properties in which it urged banks to hire only reputable vendors and to comply with all landlord-tenant laws and property maintenance provisions.

Investors such as Wiel and Magder say they are aware of the potential problems and are using updated technology and infrastructure to make sure their properties are well maintained and their tenants treated fairly.

“The onus is on us to be effective stewards of these assets,” Magder said. “We’re dealing with real people and their lives, and you have to be sensitive to that. It’s actually the right business proposition, but it’s definitely the right thing to do.”

It’s a business proposition that isn’t likely to lose steam anytime soon. From institutional investors to small-time buyers, turning foreclosures into rentals seems to be one boom that has emerged from the housing bust.

Richards, the investor from Vermont, says he has no plans to cease his regular trips to Florida. Unlike the cavalcade of speculators who flocked to the state during the boom years to make a quick buck, he said he intends to be a responsible landlord and watch his investment grow over time.

“It isn’t about the flip for me,” he said of the foreclosures he has purchased. “I really like fixing them up. I feel like I’ve helped stimulate the economy down here. I don’t want to be the one who continues to hurt it.”

Copyright © 2012 washingtonpost.com, Brady Dennis

 
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Monday, April 23, 2012

Low-ball offers don't work anymore

Low-ball offers don’t work 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®

 
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Lee County home prices jump up nearly 34%

Home prices up in Cape Coral, Fort Myers and Lehigh Acres

 
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Friday, April 20, 2012

Buyers: It's time to commit

Buyers: It’s time to commit

WASHINGTON – April 20, 2012 – It’s an old investment adage that remains true: “Buy low, sell high.”

National Association of Realtors® (NAR) President Moe Veissi, who served as Florida Realtors president in 2002, explains why conditions have never been better to buy a home in an online radio interview.

The Real Estate Today interview can also be forwarded through Facebook and Twitter to friends, family and clients.

Veissi, broker-owner of Veissi & Associates Inc. in Miami, says today’s real estate market has “less folks looking, less inventory and more contracts working. … We’re just now seeing appreciation in real estate prices in some areas of the country. … This is a wonderful time to take advantage of interest rates that are lower than they’ve ever been.”

Veissi quotes investor Warren Buffet’s outlook on the current real estate market: “Warren Buffet appeared on CNBC about two weeks ago, and the young lady that was interviewing him asked where you should invest your money. Warren said, ‘If I had the capabilities, I’d buy 200,000 homes across this county … I think that housing in America today will outstrip the investment capabilities of the Wall Street blue chips over the longer term.”

To hear the five-minute radio interview and forward to friends and clients, visit the Real Estate Today website at: http://retradio.com/?p=4916.

© 2012 Florida Realtors®

 
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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Financing for new construction available for Non US residents

NEW!

 

FINANCING for new construction is now available to

Non-US-Residents!

 

Request your rate for a purchase of an existing home!

 

Let your dream come true – own a piece of paradise! Build your vacation are retirement home in FLORIDA!

 

70% LTV
30% down payment

Interest rates start at 3,99%

 

 

Interested in more information? Please email to:

info@floridacapecoralrealestate.com

 

Del Prado Realty, LLC

 

Monday, April 16, 2012

US home prices by city, at a glance

US home prices by city, at a glance

MIAMI – April 16, 2012 – After steady declines, U.S. home prices rose slightly in February and March in some major metro areas, according to CoreLogic and Trulia, two real estate data firms. Price gains have occurred in many hard-hit areas, such as Miami and Phoenix, while losses have been reported in cities ranging from Las Vegas to Seattle to Wilmington, Del.

Here’s a look at some of the cities with the sharpest home price gains and losses over the past year, according to Trulia:

Best metro areas year-over-year change

Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.: 14.8%
Miami: 14.1%
Phoenix: 13.2%
Pittsburgh: 9.2%
Little Rock, Ark.: 6.7%
Orlando: 6.3%
North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, Fla.: 6.2%
Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, Fla.: 6.1%
West Palm Beach, Fla.: 5.8%
Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, Mich.: 5.6%

Worst metro areas year-over-year change

Tacoma, Wash.: -11.9%
Seattle: -9.1%
Sacramento, Calif.: -8.3%
Las Vegas: -7.7%
Wilmington, Del.: -7.7%
Columbia, S.C.: -7.3%
Cleveland: -6.9%
Fresno, Calif.: -6.8%
Milwaukee: -6.7%
Allentown, Pa.: -6.7%
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 
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Investors eye REOs as a 'gold rush'

Investors eye REOs as a ‘gold rush’

NEW YORK – April 16, 2012 – Investors are pouncing on foreclosure bargains and then turning the properties into moneymaking rentals, which has some drawing comparisons to a “Gold Rush” of sorts.

Diane Gozza, the executive vice president of Integrated Mortgage Solutions in Houston, recently wrote in an article for National Mortgage News that investors are eyeing the properties similar to how those risk-takers did back in the 1848 California “Gold Rush,” who also had dreams of striking it rich.

In recent months, investors have been buying up investment properties in bulk at rock-bottom prices.

They have plenty to choose from: The government-sponsored enterprises (GSE), which includes Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, own more than 200,000 single-family foreclosed homes, and banks own about 600,000 more. To help accelerate the “rush,” the Federal Housing Finance Administration recently launched a pilot foreclosure-to-rental program, offering investors the chance to bid on 2,500 foreclosure properties owned by Fannie.

But some housing experts, including the National Association of Realtors® (NAR), have argued that such REO-rental programs aren’t needed because investors are already flooding the market to buy up foreclosures, making a government intervention unnecessary. (Read “NAR: REO Rental Programs Largely Unnecessary.”

“Taking into account the enormous stockpile of REO properties currently held by the GSEs, the auction and bulk investment in REO to rental properties may indeed be the next gold rush,” Gozza writes. “Much in the spirit of the 1848 gold rush, there will be risks and tough lessons learned. But this private-sector initiative has the potential to be the catalyst for a housing market recovery.”

Source: “Tapping into the Next ‘Gold Rush,’” National Mortgage News (April 10, 2012)

 
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Tuesday, April 10, 2012

City of Cape Coral Land Purchase

City of Cape Coral Land Purchase

 

As some of you may have heard, the City of Cape Coral purchased a large number of properties through a real estate auction held at the Lee County Clerk of Courts website on Monday, April 9.  The purchase price for these properties, which previously were owned by Thieman Enterprises, was just over $13 million.  The City will gain title to 491 properties (652 acres), most of which are located in the north Cape.  The City of Cape Coral purchased these properties through a legal bid process and will take title to the properties in about 10 days.     

 

This acquisition was done to assist the City with future land requirements in the north Cape for utility and stormwater projects, parks and other public facilities such as fire stations. Because development of the north Cape is years in the offing, it is unlikely any of this newly acquired property will be expendable in the foreseeable future.     

 

As such, the City is respectfully asking REALTORS® to refrain from calling the Real Estate Office to inquire about the availability of these properties.  If the City should determine any properties are "surplus" in the future, the City will follow legal notification requirements and conduct a public hearing with City Council.  However, that probably will not happen any time soon.    

 

The City's Real Estate staff has been inundated with calls from REALTORS® asking about the availability of this property for purchase, or asserting that offers and contracts were tendered on various properties within the lot of 491 parcels.  Please be advised by this email that the City does not intend to declare any of these parcels as "surplus" for the purpose of selling them to the public at this time.   

 
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Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Will housing prices soar by 2014?

Will housing prices soar by 2014?

NEW YORK – April 4, 2012 – Real estate economists and analysts are increasingly optimistic that the housing market will have a dramatic recovery in the next two years, according to results of a new semi-annual survey of 38 real estate economists and analysts conducted by the Urban Land Institute’s Center for Capital Markets and Real Estate.

The economists predict that the national average for home prices will stop falling by this year and a subsequent turnaround will occur. By next year, they project that home prices will begin to rise by 2 percent, and then get a larger boost of 3.5 percent by 2014. The economists also predict that housing starts will nearly double by next year.

They also foresee rental prices continuing to increase for all property types, ranging from 0.8 percent to 5 percent.

The economists’ predictions were made on assumptions that the economy would continue to strengthen, including a larger drop in unemployment.

“While geopolitical and global economic events could change the forecast going forward, what we see in this survey is confidence that the U.S. real estate economy has weathered the brunt of the recent financial storm and is poised for significant improvement over the next three years,” says Patrick L. Phillips, ULI chief executive officer. “These results hold much promise for the real estate industry.”

Source: “Real Estate Will Rock in 2014,” RISMedia (March 31, 2012)

© Copyright 2012 INFORMATION, INC. Bethesda, MD (301) 215-4688


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Monday, April 2, 2012