I recently came across an interview with Jim Cramer (from Mad Money on CNBC), which I believe accurately predicts future real estate trends for the Southeast Florida housing market. For anyone considering buying Miami Beach, South Beach, or even downtown Miami waterfront properties, NOW is the time to be making offers on well priced properties.
Cramer’s Key Points:
Inventory is drying up & being steadily being absorbed
Housing starts have been down for over two years
New construction projects stopped two years ago
Florida is generally one year ahead of market trends
Interest Rate cuts have had a positive effect in absorbing excess inventory (at much reduced prices)
Palm Island – 298 S. Coconut Lane $3,150,000 5 beds / 4 baths ($787/S.F.)
Once again, the market has shown that it rewards sellers who price their properties correctly, and (in a bit of shameless but true self-promtion!) when the marketing is handled by an experienced, knowledgeable, detail-oriented, and top producing real estate salesperson. Thanks to an aggressive AND creative targeted Marketing Campaign (we had an offer come in from St. Petersburg, Russia). My advice to any seller today is to be working with an agent at the top of their field, and who will be a straight talker, positive but realistic, and follow-up with any and all potential buyers.
I recently took two of my more motivated & loyal buyers to see waterfront and non-waterfront homes on Miami Beach that were being unprofessionally represented. I was left standing in front of three (of six confirmed appointments) homes where the agents failed to show up. In two of these cases, the agents called me THE NEXT DAY wanting to reschedule the showings! Needless to say, all six of these properties remain unsold (and are great deals!).
Home buying, regardless of how intricate it can become is essentially a more up to date form of the system merchants used in the past to sell their goods: bartering. The consumer (or buyer in this case) wants to pay as little as possible and yet the seller is looking for the biggest profit possible. All this haggling would be a lot easier for both parties involved if the real estate market were in better conditions and South Florida homes were still in hot demand which, as everyone knows, isn’t quite the case.
Although one person is looking for more and the other is seeking less, there is a mutual goal: agreeing on a suitable price. While the seller has their own research to do, buyers should do a little bit of problem solving homework before putting an offer on the table.
Owning Miami Beach oceanfront condos often gives owners a sense of entitlement, especially when it comes to determining how much they can ask for it when it’s time to sell. A couple of years ago, an inflated price would be okay but it’s a different climate. If a seller’s initial asking price seems ridiculous, chances are other buyers feel the same so allow some time for the price to come down but do make sure the seller is aware of your interest. Assuming you’re using the services of a real estate agent, they can do this on your behalf and act as the intermediary once the price is reduced to something more agreeable.
The less fellow buyers involved, the better your chances of throwing out competitive numbers to achieve your ideal price. Refrain from giving the exact price you’re aiming for. Instead raise or lower the amount in order to allow yourself room to bargain without having to sacrifice too much, which simultaneously allows the seller to feel as if they’re getting something out of the deal.
If someone else has offered a price you know you can’t match, all hope is not lost. Sellers appreciate it when buyers choose to take on additional costs normally the responsibility of the seller so if you can pay for some of these, there is a very good chance a seller will accept your slightly higher proposal over someone else who offered less.
A joint venture of New York City-based ING Clarion LLC and locally based Flagstone Property Group plans to begin construction in summer 2008 on Island Gardens. The $600-million, mixed-use project is rising on Watson Island in Biscayne Bay. The project is slated for completion in 2010.
The project, located on 10.5 acres of previously undeveloped land, will feature a 43-story building with the 150-room Shangri-La Hotel and fractional ownership homes, called the Residences at Island Gardens, atop the hotel. It will also feature a 29-story business hotel/resort and the 50-slip Super-Yacht Harbour; CHI, the Spa at Shangri-La; and 221,000 sf of retail and restaurant space. Watson Island is situated between Downtown Miami and South Beach and is accessible by automobile via MacArthur Causeway (Interstate 395, the extension of Interstate 95 to South Beach.)
Flagstone Property Group chairman and CEO Mehmet Bayraktar tells GlobeSt.com that marketing efforts for the fractional units have started with prices ranging from $175,000 to $750,000 for a one-eighth interest. Final discussions are under way with the operator of the hotel/resort in the 29-story tower (announced at Art Basel as the Shangri-La Hotel Group).
Bayraktar adds that the retail space is not within the towers, but in separate structures alongside the retail avenue that runs between the two towers. Marketing efforts for the retail and dining space have recently commenced and several letters of intent have been received from restaurateurs and retailers. The positioning of the retail will be high-end luxury goods.
The project, located within minutes of Downtown Miami and Miami Beach, will feature unobstructed views of Biscayne Bay and the Miami skyline. â¬SWith its potential to transform the Miami skyline, we expect the complex to become one of the premiere leisure and hospitality addresses in the city,⬠says ING Clarion managing director Edward Rotter, in a released statement.
The Super Yacht Harbor will be the only marina in North America to be able to accommodate mega-yachts up to 300 feet in length. A 100-foot, set-back landscaped promenade will extend along the 1,000 foot length of the sea wall. The project is being designed by London-based Eric Kuhne & Associates with interiors by Italy-based Piero Lissoni.