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Housing Boom a Bust?
National Post ^ | 5/13/ 2006 | Jacqueline Thorpe, Financial Post

Posted on 05/14/2006 9:37:09 AM PDT by ex-Texan

South Florida was once so hot speculators flocked to buy and flip properties. Now the market has cooled so much they're walking away from $80,000 deposits (Welcome to Miami).

The U.S. housing market has endured a boom of historic proportions over the past few years. Adjusted for inflation, real price increases have been the highest on record, letting consumers extract equity in their homes to fund spending like never before. But many of the hottest markets in California and Florida have cooled. Jacqueline Thorpe travelled to Florida's east coast and found the mood souring faster than in Silicon Valley in the spring of 2000.

Florida's condo king, the Trump of the south, the largest developer of multi-family dwellings in the United States, is under no illusions about the property market that appears to be softening right beneath his stylishly shod feet.

Jorge Perez, 57, whose Related Group of Florida has ridden the recent U.S. property boom perhaps faster and further than any other developer -- including Donald Trump himself -- knows the market has cooled.

"Things are definitely slowing," says Mr. Perez in an interview in his office south of Miami, where an army of his luxury condominiums sits on almost every street corner and bulldozers frantically dig the ground for more.

Mr. Perez has about 14,000 units in 19 buildings worth US$8-billion either under construction or about to be started, most in South Florida.

"There has been a great amount of construction, some overbuilding," concedes Mr. Perez, pink shirt still crisp, despite a dash from the blast furnace outside.

"To be part of that great growth, people have done projects in secondary sites, and the media [have] on a daily basis told prospective buyers the bubble is going to burst," he says. "I think people are taking a much more measured look at real estate. So our universe has shrunk. Speculators have almost dropped out of the market and sales have slowed down. And I think those people who should never have been in the development business -- because everybody became a developer in the last few years -- will suffer."

Only time will tell whether prices will correct with a slow leak, a bang or even re-accelerate after a brief pause.

But as Canada gears up for another brisk homebuying season, U.S. figures show a sudden weakening since the end of last year.

Nationwide, new-home sales are 11% below last year's peak and existing home sales are off 5%. The inventory of single-family homes for sale has risen to a 5.3-month supply from 4.0 a year ago and the condo supply has nearly doubled to 6.9 months. Prices are still rising in most regions of the United States but no longer at a scorching pace; median resale prices are off 5% from their peak.

On the ground in Florida, which, like California and Washington, D.C., has posted double-digit sales declines in the past months, the mood is souring as fast as Silicon Valley in March, 2000.

Where developers in the Sunshine State once held lavish sales launch parties, with champagne, canapes and dancing acrobats in a market every bit as raucous as the high-tech frenzy, they're now throwing incentives at buyers. Where buyers camped out for days to get first dibs on some homes, they are now selling at auction. And where investors once turned to housing after their equity portfolios melted, they're now walking away from deposits.

"I think, in 18 months, as sad as it would be, there will be 30% fewer mortgage brokers in this business," says Richard Shaffer of Prestige Mortgage and Investment Group in Palm Beach, Fla.

An estimated 25% to 50% of all U.S. jobs have been connected to the housing industry in recent years, but jobs are not the only thing at stake.

Consumers have used the rising value of their homes to tap equity and fund spending in a way unknown a decade ago. A slump in prices could turn that tap off, causing a sharp slowdown in the economy, which could sideswipe Canada.

"This is the first cycle that you could actually instantaneously crystallize the rise in the notional price of a home and use it for current consumption," says David Rosenberg, chief North American economist for Merrill Lynch & Co.

"The mortgage market today is bigger than the government bond market; housing is valued at double the level of household equities on the household balance sheet," he says. "Never before has housing come to permeate the economic and social fabric to the extent that it does today. So that's why, if you ask me, what the No. 1 risk is to the U.S. economy: It is going to be what the house-price landscape is, what happens to house prices."

With most of his condo developments 100% sold, Mr. Perez believes he has deep enough pockets to weather any downturn. But take a trip a few miles north, to 444 Brickell Ave., where the whole building appears devoted to real estate -- searching titles, copying documents, lining up mortgages -- and the mood turns less hopeful. Go farther up the Florida Turnpike to less glamorous but equally real estate-obsessed markets such as Stuart or Port St. Lucie and the mood turns downright desperate.

Harry Rodstein, president of H.R. Mortgage & Realty Co. at 444 Brickell, says the market has turned on a dime.

He has sold seven of 12 US $600,000 to US $1.4-million units in a nearby condo project, but sales at his condo conversion in Sarasota have ground to a halt. Conversions are apartment buildings converted to condos, the latest real estate fad to hit the state.

"What I've seen is that sales, particularly in condo conversions, have fallen off the end of the table," he says.

He blames the retreat on excessive media coverage of the bubble and a U.S. Federal Reserve that does not know when to let up with interest rate hikes.

A 30-year fixed mortgage has risen to 6.49%, 100 basis points above its generational low in 2003, but nowhere near the 10%-plus rates that sent housing over the edge in the last major U.S. real estate slump in the late-1980s.

"People are mentally spooked and the argument is: 'Why does the Fed have to continue to beat it to destroy it?' " he says. "I don't get it."

Mr. Rodstein neglected to mention one crucial factor -- oversupply. Across the United States, there are 3.5 million single-family homes and condo units up for sale, a record, and up 30% from a year ago.

In Miami-Dade County alone, there are 25,000 condos under construction and another 25,000 that have already got their financing and are likely to go forward, says Jack McCabe, chief executive of McCabe Research and Consulting in Deerfield, Fla. In addition, 50,000 more have been announced.

In the whole period from 1995 to 2004, only 9,079 units were built in Miami Dade.

On the Turnpike going north from Miami, those numbers are reflected in the blizzard of billboards flying by, enticing homebuyers on every budget: "From the under US$900,000s. Great value, from the under US$100,000s." Golf community, gated community, the best in condo living, your private getaway by the beach.

And 160 kilometres up the coast, Stuart and Port St. Lucie bake in the humid air; a collection of delicate islands glitter off shore.

Once a sleepy hamlet, strong job growth and immigration made Port St. Lucie the fastest-growing city in the United States in July, 2004 -- its population having swollen 12% to 118,000.

Home prices swelled, too. They have risen 142% over the past five years, the third-highest among 30 cities in a recent study by Merrill Lynch. Florida has 16 cities with the greatest price appreciation, the most of any state.

Trouble is, the housing stock has been growing even faster. Building has been frenzied. Row upon row of "master-planned" developments fan out in every direction from the centre of Port St. Lucie.

In nearby Stuart, the joke among the locals at the Tikki Bar at the Ramada Inn -- complete with thatched roof and a cast of characters straight out of the movie Barfly -- is that the new Wal-Mart can't keep its shelves stocked because the only people the retailer can find to work keep failing the drug tests.

Mike Morgan, broker-owner of Morgan Florida Real Estate in Stuart, says the region had also been a magnet for the flippers who have played a key role in driving prices higher across the United States.

Buyers would put a deposit down on a house in pre-construction and quickly sell as the price rose, "flipping" the contract to the next person even before getting a mortgage.

"It was like a gold rush," says Mr. Morgan on a tour of "Martin's Crossing," a slapped-together-looking development of $260,000 to $300,000 homes and townhomes, wedged between a trailer park, drainage ditch and the highway.

"I was doing an open house for the townhomes we had listed there and these four elderly ladies told me they bought four of them. They said: 'We drove up from Miami and Ft. Lauderdale, we got off the I-95 and this was the first thing we found.' They bought four."

According to the National Association of Realtors, sales of second homes for investment or vacation purposes hit records last year, accounting for four of 10 real estate transactions.

Mr. Morgan has had investors from the U.K., an actress from Los Angeles and buyers from all over the United States wanting to buy, sight unseen.

"Here's the pool," he says wryly, pointing to a swamp at the back of the development, a 21st century twist on that old line, "If you believe that...."

The garages are so tiny Mr. Morgan can't fit his truck in and there's no room to park on the street because the driveways are jammed together. A knot of gas pipes is an interesting front-yard ornament.

There are "For Sale" signs on every block and many homes are obviously empty, without curtains on the windows.

Obsessively checking his BlackBerry for potential leads, Mr. Morgan says people wouldn't ask him the questions they normally ask when looking for real estate, such as details about the location, amenities and taxes.

"They would only be concerned whether it was pre-construction," says Mr. Morgan. "Pre-construction became the buzzword, like dot-com. They only wanted pre-construction. I'd say I've got these units that were already built and they'd give a good income stream, but they'd say, 'No, no, I want to flip the contract before I close.'"

When builders clamped down on flipping about a year ago, forcing buyers to produce a mortgage contract before agreeing to a deal, many turned to such exotic financial products as adjustable rate mortgages and interest-only loans that allow minimal payments at the beginning of the term.

If a buyer flips before the mortgage is reset and the price of the home is higher, the investment can work beautifully, but the risk is the house doesn't sell and the buyer is stuck with a jump in rates.

The Merrill Lynch study found non-traditional mortgage products accounted for 60% of loans last year in California, the hottest market in the United States.

"That's really bizarre," says Mr. Shaffer at Prestige Mortgage. "When you think about it, you should be fixing at historically low rates."

Many flippers are now walking away from their deposits or trying to wiggle out of their contracts, using shoddy workmanship as a loophole. Mr. Morgan says he now has 43 investors who are walking away from deposits of $35,000 to $80,000.

Bruce, a telecom manager in Los Angeles, walked away from two deals in Port St. Lucie earlier this year. He had flipped half-a-dozen properties from L.A. to Arizona, making from US$75,000 to close to US$200,000 on each.

"At the beginning of last year, I came to Port St. Lucie," he says, wishing to keep his last name unknown. "I looked at the situation but I didn't really get the same feeling."

Against his gut instinct, he went ahead anyway and bought three townhomes in a low-end development. In an indication of how lax the market was, the developers were asking for deposits of only US$1,000 each. He kept one and pulled out of two, and Mr. Morgan reimbursed him the deposit.

In Port St. Lucie, staff in the model homes along Bayshore Boulevard are plying their trade like snake oil salesmen on Saturday night at a county fair.

The homes, certainly gorgeous with granite in the kitchen, marble in the bathroom, sunken tubs, walk-in closets and lap pools out back, are practically deserted on a Wednesday afternoon. The sales reps pounce on the few stragglers and the incentives start flying.

Mercedes Homes is offering to pay up to $10,000 worth of closing costs and a buyer can get a 5.5% mortgage versus the going rate of 6%. Star Homes of Florida is throwing in granite counters, maple cabinets and stainless steel GE appliances. At the Portofino at Jensen Beach, the developers are offering 2% of the purchase price toward closing costs, and offer to cover one year of home-ownership dues.

It's a far cry from a year ago when the money was flowing and developers tried to outdo each other with their elaborate launch parties.

"It's been nuts down here," says Mr. McCabe at McCabe Research. "It's just been a circus. We've seen grand openings where projects, hundreds and hundreds of units, were sold out in one day or in a weekend. We've had celebrities brought in for these grand openings. We've had lotteries."

In Miami, Cabi Developers erected a fog-strewn jungle complete with fauna -- a Florida panther, baby alligator and squawking parrots -- to draw buyers to the Everglades on the Bay in late 2004, according to a story in The Miami Herald.

Recently, three new homes at PGA Village, an exclusive golf community in St. Lucie West, were sold by auction.

Jeff Banack, 38, an investment salesman, picked up a two-bedroom home for $235,000 plus the 10% buyer's premium after some intense bidding on a balmy evening. He got a deal.

Al Deleeuw, a builder from Detroit, had two similar houses for sale on the same street for $350,000 and $345,000.

Mr. Deleeuw says he thought the price was right because he's had price agreements on both, but they fell through.

"I think the criteria is getting a little bit difficult for people to get mortgages," says Mr. Deleeuw, on the phone from Detroit. "South Florida is not as affordable as it used to be. It is taking a lot longer to sell. The days of flipping these things in two or three weeks are over."

At the auction, one of the associates at Karlin Daniel & Associates Inc., the auctioneer adds: "We are the price reality check."

The locals at the Tikki Bar in Stuart shake their heads in amusement at the craziness that descended on their city.

"Port St. Lucie used to be the country -- now you can't get through the traffic," says Lesa Woodall Pence, a Mary Kay beauty consultant whose luminous skin is a rarity in this sun-drenched place. "I'm looking to move."

Her mobile home was trashed by Hurricane Wilma last year. She's thinking about Tennessee.

Non-Florida residents, such as Canadian snowbirds, are also facing mounting municipal taxes while hurricane insurance is hard to get and expensive.

Mr. Morgan is convinced the retreat is going to be ugly and Mr. McCabe is trying to set up a vulture fund of sorts to buy up depressed property.

He's hoping to raise $250-million in equity and borrow $750-million to buy up to $1-billion in new condos, possibly some projects or development sites. Interest has been strong, he says.

But there is also a decent chance markets could just cool down for a bit and the balance restored as supply is absorbed, especially if the Fed is nearly done with the rate hikes, as many expect.

Florida has only had four quarters of declining prices in recent times -- two in 1976 and two in 1994-95, the least of any state, according to the Merrill Lynch study.

But it has also had the mother of all U.S. housing crashes, the land bust of the mid-1920s as buyers dried up after an eerily similar property explosion.

For his part, Mr. Perez forecasts a secondary boom once the excess disappears.

"We're confident that we have produced so much product that we have delivered, or [are] ready to deliver, [and] our financial position is so strong we will be able to weather any downturn in the market," he says.

Related Group, privately held with Mr. Perez as main shareholder, had reported sales of US$3.2-billion in 2005.

He is now looking at land in Atlanta as well as other parts of the country, and has certainly not given up on Florida.

He recently announced a partnership with Donald Trump, a friend and collaborator in the past, to build a 40-storey luxury condo in Hollywood, Fla. Prices range from $1.6-million to $6-million.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: andagonyonme; blogpimper; bubbles; despair; gloom; housing; iluvwilliegreen; mortgages; realestate; theskyisfalling; wrongsince2003; zotmeplease
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Helpful charts, graphs and other information are posted my FR Page
1 posted on 05/14/2006 9:37:12 AM PDT by ex-Texan
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To: ex-Texan

The real estate market was due for a correction.

Here in southeastern Wisconsin, things have tightened up but property values continue to rise, albiet slower than previous years.


2 posted on 05/14/2006 9:46:55 AM PDT by Crooked Constituent
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To: ex-Texan

Gee, how many poential buyers in South Florida are saying, " Hmm,I wonder, after shelling out $600,000, whether my house will still be standing after the next hurricane."


3 posted on 05/14/2006 9:48:23 AM PDT by A message
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To: Crooked Constituent

there has also been a large amount of foreign investment coming in. the extraordinarily low interest rates coupled with the weak dollar(higher conversion for their currency) lead to an international interest in our housing here. things are cooling off now. most of the victims will be American unfortunately


4 posted on 05/14/2006 9:50:34 AM PDT by kinoxi
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To: ex-Texan

"Bruce, a telecom manager in Los Angeles, walked away from two deals in Port St. Lucie earlier this year. He had flipped half-a-dozen properties from L.A. to Arizona, making from US$75,000 to close to US$200,000 on each."

Lets say he made $125,000 per house on average. For six houses, he made $750,000. Even if he lost his deposit over two (article says $1,000 per house), he is still ahead by more than half a million. Not bad.


5 posted on 05/14/2006 9:59:36 AM PDT by razoroccam (Then in the name of Allah, they will let loose the Germs of War (http://www.booksurge.com))
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To: A message

I live in Pasco Central Florida and saw this coming because here the insurance rates have jumped through the roof. It's not hurricanes, it's sinkholes and aggressive attorneys who have found a candy store in the state insurance co, Citizens.

Citizens is so badly run that for years people are walking away with more than the value of their houses with the barest of proof. Now insurance rates have quadrupled and people are literally losing their homes and dumping them on the market because they cannot pay the homeowners. (In 3 years a jump from $600 to $4000 is typical.)

Lots of elderly on fixed incomes simply can't do it. If they've paid off, they are simply going without. Almost 25% of the houses in my area are naked in the storm, so to speak. A hurricane would be a financial disaster here.

My house has dropped almost 25% in value this year.


6 posted on 05/14/2006 10:00:32 AM PDT by I still care ("Remember... for it is the doom of men that they forget" - Merlin, from Excalibur)
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To: ex-Texan

has anybody bought a condo/loft in downtown Los Angeles?

i'm compelled to but i need much more education about financing and real estate values.

presently about 10,000 units are in development downtown, renovations and new construction. the downtown is sketchy in some areas, but seems like it has nothing to do but appreciate as a result of all the new development and influx of professionals.

i'm only considering a unit in an old building. the new stuff feels very cheap and domestic, as opposed to the historic and raw of the old (real lofts).


7 posted on 05/14/2006 10:02:04 AM PDT by Swordfished
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To: ex-Texan

ex-texan is the willie green of housing.

It must really suck to be around him. Pessimism bleeds all over everyone.

I live in Fort Lauderdale, and my house is worth more than double what I paid for it 4 years ago.

Miami sucks, period. Dade County, corruption, traffic, signs in spanish. Nobody wants to live there.

But north,in Broward Co., it's different. I have people literally knocking on my door asking me if I want to sell.

1000 people a day move to Florida.

Willie Green, I mean ex-texan, can bleed pesimism all day. What a loser.


8 posted on 05/14/2006 10:02:05 AM PDT by MonroeDNA (Look for the union label--on the bat crashing through your windshield!)
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To: I still care
"My house has dropped almost 25% in value this year."

Liar. Type in your address at zillow.com, pull up the graph, and show us.

9 posted on 05/14/2006 10:04:58 AM PDT by MonroeDNA (Look for the union label--on the bat crashing through your windshield!)
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To: MonroeDNA
"The most difficult thing to do is the right thing to do."
--Meyer, in a Travis McGee novel (The Turquoise Lament?)
10 posted on 05/14/2006 10:05:02 AM PDT by ex-Texan (Matthew 7:1 through 6)
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To: ex-Texan
The big difference between the real estate market and the stock market is that housing supply and demand varies tremendously based on location. The price of an identical house can cost you $100K in one part of the country and $1M in another. The price of a share of Exxon stock is the same everywhere.

Consequently, I do not see a national real estate bust, just as there has never been a national real estate boon. At any point in time since WWII you can point to places that are having a real estate boom and other places that are having a real estate bust.

11 posted on 05/14/2006 10:05:21 AM PDT by Bubba_Leroy (What did Rather know and when did he know it?)
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To: MonroeDNA

Property markets are not uniform within countries. It may be that Florida requires a price correction. That does not necessarily mean that a correction is required in say, Texas. In fact, as you rightly point out, some parts of Florida may require a correction, but others, no.

It's not intellectually adequate to say that it's going to be happening across the board except in the case of a general, rather than property price, recession.

Regards, Ivan


12 posted on 05/14/2006 10:06:00 AM PDT by MadIvan (I aim to misbehave.)
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To: MonroeDNA

I suspect some of the properties in Louisiana have lost some value.


13 posted on 05/14/2006 10:08:54 AM PDT by verity (The MSM is comprised of useless eaters)
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To: MadIvan

fed rate raises do cause national modifications(trends), as do dollar conversion rates for out of country investors


14 posted on 05/14/2006 10:11:44 AM PDT by kinoxi
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To: A message
Gee, how many poential buyers in South Florida are saying, " Hmm,I wonder, after shelling out $600,000, whether my house will still be standing after the next hurricane."

It seems that doesn't matter to them. Houses have been selling like mad down there.

15 posted on 05/14/2006 10:12:08 AM PDT by raybbr (You think it's bad now - wait till the anchor babies start to vote!!!)
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To: A message

there still fighting for homes in my part of so fl


16 posted on 05/14/2006 10:15:48 AM PDT by italianquaker (Democrats and media can't win elections at least they can win their phony polls.)
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To: MonroeDNA
ex-texan is the willie green of housing. It must really suck to be around him. Pessimism bleeds all over everyone.

From the real estate closings in the Martin Co edition of the Palm Beach comPost I calculate that sales are about 10% of what they were two years ago.

Here in Hobe Sound For-sale signs are numerous and gathering dust.

I would say the article is accurate and the sentiment is not unreasonable.

17 posted on 05/14/2006 10:16:48 AM PDT by corkoman
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To: I still care
Now insurance rates have quadrupled and people are literally losing their homes and dumping them on the market because they cannot pay the homeowners. (In 3 years a jump from $600 to $4000 is typical.)

I had no idea. I'm very sorry to hear of this. :-(

18 posted on 05/14/2006 10:19:09 AM PDT by A message
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To: italianquaker

They're still fighting for homes in my part of Ca. too, despite one good slip of a fault line and everything turns to rubble.

I just upgraded my earthquake insurance and it still nowhere near the homeowners that a previous poster mentioned.


19 posted on 05/14/2006 10:24:12 AM PDT by A message
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To: MonroeDNA
ex-texan is the willie green of housing. It must really suck to be around him. Pessimism bleeds all over everyone. I live in Fort Lauderdale, and my house is worth more than double what I paid for it 4 years ago.

Which means that your kids may not be able to afford housing in Fort Lauderdale when they having families of their own...............Until the wave of foreclosures devastates those who bought at prices they could never afford without gimmick financing.

One has to keep in mind how much of the price inflation represents true value and how much of the price inflation is only made possible by the extremely risky financing gimmicks that will leave your kids either homeless after foreclosure or slaves to a mortgage where the principal will never be paid off.

In 1929, every Tom, Dick and Harry was buying hyper-priced stocks on margin and with ......interest only loans.

A recent article in the Wall Street Journal had this to say: "Interest-only mortgages were the *standard mortgage in the 1920s*, but they disappeared during the Great Depression, and for good reason ... the drop in real-estate values during the Depression pushed a large proportion of interest-only loans into foreclosure. Lenders switched entirely to fully amortizing loans, and that has been the standard mortgage loan since."

20 posted on 05/14/2006 10:43:37 AM PDT by Polybius
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