Big story in the Post over the weekend along similar lines.
Looks like bubble-poppin time.



-----Original Message-----
From: PEN-L list [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jim Devine
Sent: Monday, April 24, 2006 9:33 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: There's going to be a lot of property avaiable soon..

  Hot homes get cold in once-booming markets

Michael Corkery
Wall Street Journal
Apr. 12,  2006 12:21 PM

MIAMI - Todd Linsley, a 37-year-old investor,  bought a three-bedroom
house in Stuart, Fla., for about $318,000 in late 2005.  His original
plan was to quickly flip the property - which is in a new housing
development about 40 miles north of West Palm Beach - by selling it
for as high  as $425,000. But when he saw that the market was turning,
he decided to list the  home for $379,900. It's been on the market
since early January with no  takers.

Linsley says home builders keep discounting unsold houses in the
neighborhood - sometimes axing as much as $100,000 off the original
asking  price. He says he can't afford to go that low. "If I got in a
jam I would have  to drop the price, but I am not at that point," he
says.

So now he's  renting his investment house out for $1,000 a month,
while paying a $2,045  monthly mortgage and a $108 monthly homeowner's
association fee. "My Plan B was  always to rent it out. I am not going
to lose my shirt," says Mr. Linsley, a  salesman for a
medical-products company.

Linsley is far from the only  housing-market investor who has been
forced to go to Plan B in recent months.  Many cities that experienced
fast run-ups in home prices during the past five  years are now seeing
sales cool the fastest.

Homes that just last year  were selling so rapidly that they stayed on
the market for just days or even  hours - condominiums on the Florida
coastline, desert haciendas in California  and Arizona, town houses in
Washington, D.C. - are now languishing without  buyers or even
prospects. Many once-booming markets are seeing double-digit  declines
in sales.

Home sales have been slowing for several months, but  real-estate
agents in some of these formerly red-hot markets have been surprised
at how suddenly market conditions have deteriorated in the past few
months. The  Florida Association of Realtors reported recently that
sales of existing  single-family homes were down about 20 percent in
February when compared to the  same month a year ago - and they were
off as much as 47 percent in Naples. In  California, sales dropped 15
percent in February compared with last year, led by  a 30 percent
decline in Sacramento, according to the California Association of
Realtors. February sales were off year over year by about 19 percent
in  Washington, D.C., and down about 25 percent in and around
Phoenix.

Nationally, housing sales are a mixed picture. While nationwide  sales
of existing homes increased 5.2 percent from January to February on a
seasonably adjusted basis, new-home sales dropped 10.5 percent. Right
now,  economists say the housing market will have only a modest
negative impact on the  overall economy, which has been robust. They
note that while sales are  slackening, they aren't collapsing - they
are, in many cases, simply settling  into a normal market pace.
Inventories are rising but they haven't reached an  alarming amount.
And while demand for homes is easing off in markets that  previously
sizzled, they are posting gains in cities where prices are still
considered bargains, including Indianapolis, Albuquerque, N.M., and
Houston.

But for cities like Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Phoenix and San  Diego, the
dropoff in sales and rising supply of homes on the market could soon
put downward pressure on prices.

"In some places prices might fall. In  others, price gains will slow,"
says David Berson, chief economist at Fannie  Mae, the
mortgage-finance company. The price gains over the past five years,
which caused home values to double in many of the hottest markets,
"were not  sustainable," he says.

The current slowdown reflects three broad trends,  according to
real-estate agents and economists. One of the most important is  that
many speculators have started to dump homes that were purchased as
investments. In addition, high prices and rising interest rates have
reduced  affordability for middle-class families. Finally, the
intensity of recent  hurricanes has prompted potential buyers of
second homes to pull back in places  like Florida. Some even blame
media coverage that has warned of a possible  downturn for triggering
a real downturn.

Nowhere are these trends more  vivid than in Florida. There were more
building permits issued for single-family  and multi-family homes in
Florida last year than in any other state, according  to the National
Association of Home Builders. Five of the 10 metropolitan areas  with
the strongest one-year price appreciation last year were in Florida,
the  Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight reports.

"You could  consider Florida to be ground zero for the housing
market," says Mark Zandi,  chief economist at Moody's Economy.com, an
economic consulting firm in West  Chester, Pa. He says the factors
that caused the housing market to overheat  nationwide - such as
"creative financing" offered to credit-risky buyers - were
exacerbated in Florida. "There were more lenders, more realtors, more
foreign  investors," than anyplace else, he says.

How investors react will have a  big impact on how Florida's
correction will unfold. According to San  Francisco-based
LoanPerformance, which tracks mortgages nationwide, 15 percent  of
Florida homes last year were purchased by investors, the most of any
state.  Investors are also critical, economists say, because in a
slowing market they  could be quicker to drop their prices to cut
their losses than typical  homeowners.

Speculative buying helped drive up prices in many Florida  cities and
shut out many nonspeculative buyers. Recent upticks in interest rates
have put homeownership even further out of reach.

To be sure, the slowing  in Florida could prove to be temporary. The
state remains one of the fastest  growing in the nation. It's growing,
on average, by 1,000 people a day.  Florida's economy is relatively
strong and it continues to create new jobs. And  while many Florida
cities are seeing declines in sales, a smaller group of  Florida
markets is holding steady. Sales in Jacksonville were essentially
unchanged in February year over year, and they were up in Tallahassee.
But in  many other parts of the state "things have slowed to a crawl,"
says Mike Morgan,  a broker in Stuart, Fla.

Another factor that may be affecting sales is  the appearance of some
investor-dominated housing developments, some of which  were built
with minimal landscaping next to highways, cemeteries and mobile-home
parks. Several of the housing developments snapped up by investors now
look like  ghost towns, with "For Sale" or "For Rent" signs in many
windows. In some cases,  the builders "were building for investors,
not for homeowners," says Mr. Morgan,  who is trying to resell several
investor-owned homes with mixed  success.

About a year ago, when the market was stronger, Morgan sold  homes to
several out-of-state investors, who never saw the property in person.
"It's really no different from the dot-com (bust)," Mr. Morgan says.
"The people  who bought the (low-quality homes) got clobbered." He
says he refused to sell  poor-quality homes to his clients. "If I
didn't have any ethics, I could have  made a million dollars last
year."

The swelling supply of condominiums is  also causing concern. In
Miami-Dade County alone, there are roughly 70,000 new  condos either
under construction or nearing construction, and an additional  25,000
units that have been announced but don't have final approval, says
Michael Cannon, managing director at Integra Realty Resources-south
Florida,  which analyzes the local market.

"We believe that the condo market is  more distressed," says Hank
Fishkind, principal at Orlando-based Fishkind &  Associates, an
economic and financial consultant. "We are seeing a mismatch in
timing. The projects started two years ago - the delivery is
accelerating, while  closings are slowing."

Adding to that supply are the rental apartments  that have been
converted into condominiums. Cannon says roughly 150,000 rental
apartments in South Florida have been converted or have begun to be
converted to  condos in recent years. Typically, the condo converter
buys the rental unit,  renovates it and then sells it to an
individual, often an investor.

Paul  Zani, an investor, is trying to resell two converted units he
purchased in  Orlando. He bought one condo unit in November for
$137,000 and had it listed for  $185,000; he bought the other for
$147,000 and it was listed for $195,000. But  he's been unable to
resell either one. "We will probably come down on the  price," says
Mr. Zani, who lives in Nashville, Tenn. Some pockets of the condo
market may fare better than others. Mr. Cannon says parts of Miami's
downtown  business district and the area north of downtown, which
aren't directly on the  ocean, "have the signs of being overbuilt. The
jury is still out. We have to  wait until they are completed," he
says. Meantime, John Warsing, a broker of  high-end Miami-area condos
at Turnberry International Realty in Aventura, Fla.,  says "anything
oceanfront is going to be fine," in part because well-heeled
consumers from across the world are attracted to buying oceanfront
property.

Other problems are rattling Florida's market. Home-insurance  costs
are rising, after the active hurricane season of the past few years.
And  real-estate agents say some homeowners are spooked by the storms
themselves.

"A lot of people have that view of New Orleans in their minds  and
they are getting nervous. They are putting houses on the market," says
 Melissa Watkins, a sales agent with Michael Saunders & Co., near
Sarasota.  "They are not living here full time and (their home) is an
investment. They want  to pull their money out and hold on it."

Ms. Watkins says sales are slow,  inventory is rising and listing
prices are being reduced slightly. She says one  recent deal almost
fell through at the last minute when the buyer balked at the
insurance premiums on a high-end, waterfront home.

Some Floridians blame  the media and even Wall Street for scaring
people away. Mr. Linsley recalled a  headline in a local paper
declaring that the local housing market was  overvalued. The headline
type was so bold that it looked as if the nation had  just declared
war. "The media is killing the investors," Mr. Linsley  says.

Despite the current turmoil, some Floridians remain bullish,
including Stuart Miller, the chief executive officer of Miami-based
Lennar, one  of the largest home builders in the U.S. But Mr. Morgan,
the broker, says for  him the market has slowed considerably. He wrote
in an email late last week that  "we went three days this week with
not a single showing. That's incredible. I  have 35 listings. We
usually get 2-6 showings a day. ... I received more  desperate calls
from sellers than ever. One lady broke down into tears. Her  husband
bought two investment properties, and they are now going to lose their
 'life savings' if they sell the homes in today's market."
--
Jim Devine / "There can be no real individual freedom in the presence
of economic insecurity." -- Chester Bowles

Reply via email to