Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Miami is No. 2 in foreign buyers’ searches


Orlando-Florida-Skyline









Miami was the second-most searched-for housing market in the U.S. among international buyers in February, according to monthly data from the National Association of Realtors.
Orlando, No. 4, and Fort Lauderdale, No. 5, also cracked the list. Florida was represented in the top 10 more than any other state. Los Angeles, however, landed at the top of the chart.
Residents of Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Brazil and France were the most recurring visitors to the NAR website when it came to Miami listings in February.
The Miami Association of Realtors reported more visits to its website from Venezuela than any other foreign nation in October, as previously reported.


Article from TRD

Monday, April 7, 2014

Miami’s economy outpacing rest of Southeast

Steady job growth and a strong real estate market make South Florida’s economic outlook brighter than the rest of the U.S. Southeast, according to the chief of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
“On the measure of development of commercial real estate and investment in residential real estate, as well as the employment picture, I think Miami is a little better off than most of the Southeast,” Dennis Lockhart said Wednesday at a Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce event.


As a whole, he said, the region is tracking the national economy but lagging behind in employment numbers in some areas. Not so in Florida, where the latest state unemployment rate was 6.2 percent, better than the national rate of 6.7 percent.
Beyond the official unemployment rate reported by the federal government, Lockhart said he and his Atlanta-based forecasters look at a broader labor pool. Their tally includes so-called marginally attached workers who want jobs but are not actively looking as well as part-time workers who would like to move up to full-time employment. The unemployment rate when you factor in those groups is 12.6 percent, he said.


“The good news is that, over the past six months, the difference between these two measures of unemployment has in fact been narrowing,” Lockhart said.
Also, unlike the rest of the Southeast, he added that Miami’s “unique attributes” as an international city have helped accelerate the economy through foreign investment in high-priced real estate.
Lockhart, who has served as president and CEO of the Atlanta Fed since 2007, addressed about 300 chamber members and guests at the group’s monthly trustee luncheon at Jungle Island.
He noted that harsh winter weather across most of the country caused a hiccup in economic recovery in the first three months of the year — though not in Florida, which may have benefitted from frigid temperatures elsewhere.


The national economy will bounce back in the second quarter and beyond, Lockhart projected, acknowledging that his opinions were his own and that “my colleagues in the Federal Reserve system may not agree.”
Calling the first quarter “a one-off spell of weaker performance,” Lockhart said national economic growth will pick back up, unemployment will shrink, and interest rates are not likely to rise until the end of 2015.


“My key working assumption is that growth will accelerate in the second quarter and repeat in subsequent quarters,” he said. “I expect stronger growth will help to absorb underutilized resources in the economy, especially labor resources.”
 
Article from Miami Herald

Miami’s economy outpacing rest of Southeast - Business - MiamiHerald.com

Miami’s economy outpacing rest of Southeast - Business - MiamiHerald.com

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Miami News: Could the Miami skyline one day resemble Manhattan...

Miami News: Could the Miami skyline one day resemble Manhattan...: ICON BRICKELL, a three-tower complex in Miami’s financial district, was supposed to be a flagship project for the Related Group, the c...

Could the Miami skyline one day resemble Manhattan’s?





ICON BRICKELL, a three-tower complex in Miami’s financial district, was supposed to be a flagship project for the Related Group, the city’s top condominium developer. It would boast 1,646 luxury condos, a 91-metre-long pool, and a hundred 22-foot columns in its entryway. By 2010, however, it had become a symbol of the excesses of the city’s building boom, and Related was forced to hand two of the towers to its banks. Miami condo prices plunged to 60% below their peak. The vacancy rate jumped to 60%. Predictions flew that the market, the epicentre of America’s property crash, would take ten years to come back, or even longer.
The speed of the recovery has surprised everyone. Condo prices are already back near peak levels in Miami’s most desirable areas, and at 75-80% elsewhere. The available supply of units has fallen back to within the six-to-nine-months-of-sales range considered normal, from a stomach-churning 40 in 2008. Only 3% of condos are unoccupied. Sales of condos and single-family homes are above pre-crisis levels across Miami-Dade County. Commercial property, too, has rebounded, with demand outstripping supply. Developers are once again relaxed enough to crack jokes. “I call the current expansion the Viagra cycle,” jokes Carlos Rosso, Related’s president of condominium development. “We just want it to last a little longer.”

The recovery has been partly driven by low interest rates and bottom-fishing by private equity, which helped to clear excess inventory. But the biggest factor is that the city nicknamed the “Capital of Latin America” has attracted a flood of capital from Latin America. Rich people in turbulent spots such as Venezuela and Argentina are seeking a safe haven for their savings.
Estate agents are also seeing capital flight from within the United States. Individuals pay no state or city income tax in Miami, unlike, say, New York, whose mayor wants to hike taxes on the rich further. “Somebody said to me, ‘Give me three reasons why this will continue.’ My answer was: Maduro, Kirchner and De Blasio,” chuckles Marc Sarnoff, a Miami city commissioner, referring to the leaders of the capitalist-bashing regimes in Venezuela, Argentina and New York.
Another attraction is the 40% rise in Miami condo rents since 2009, buoying the income of owners who choose not to live in the tropical hurly-burly that Dave Barry, a local author, calls “Insane City”. Brokers report increased business from Eastern Europe and the Middle East (Qatar Airways will fly direct to Miami from June), and an uptick in inquiries from Chinese buyers.
 

Is another bubble forming already? Developers say this time is different, and in some ways it is. In a few years Miami has gone from the most- to the least-leveraged property market in America. Buyers of new condos typically have to put 50% down, half of that before building starts. Banks are loth to extend construction loans unless 60-75% of the units are already sold. In both residential and commercial projects, they require developers to put in much more equity than before. Mr Rosso says Related now puts in three times as much, which limits its ambition. The firm now has 2,000 condos in the works, a tenth of what it was building in 2007.
Still, a supply glut is possible. With developers gung-ho again, around 50 towers are under construction or planned in downtown Miami (including the Porsche Design Tower, whose well-heeled inhabitants will be able to take their cars up to the level on which they live in a special lift—this is useful if you really love your car). More were added last month when Oleg Baybakov, a Russian mining-to-property oligarch, bought a trio of condo-development sites for $30m, more than triple their assessed market value in 2013.
Miami’s developers are adept at using “smoke and mirrors” to hide the true number of pre-sold units, says Peter Zalewski of Condo Vultures, a property-intelligence firm. Some see the first signs of trouble. The stock of unsold condos and houses has crept up slightly since last summer. A local broker says that Blackstone, a private-equity firm with a taste for bricks and mortar, bought $120m of properties with his firm’s help in 2013 but “won’t do anything like that this year”. Mr Zalewski says banks are competing harder to finance certain projects, but this may not be a sign of unadulterated bullishness. They may simply be betting that many of the 134 towers proposed but not yet under construction in South Florida won’t get built—meaning the 57 that have already broken ground will do better than forecast.

Much will depend on whether Latin Americans remain addicted to Miami property and, should their ardour cool, whether Americans and others would take up the slack. Few domestic buyers are comfortable putting 50% down, especially when most of it is at risk if the project fails. One or two developers have begun to accept 30% down, a possible sign of increased reliance on home-grown buyers.

The market should get a fillip from the current and planned redevelopment of several chunks of downtown Miami. One of the most ambitious projects is Miami Worldcenter, a 30-acre retail, hotel and convention-centre complex that will feature Bloomingdale’s, Macy’s and a giant Marriott hotel. A science museum will soon join the art museum .

These projects build on progress made over the past decade towards becoming a world-class city, from the opening of dozens of top-notch restaurants to Art Basel picking Miami as one of the three venues for its shows (“the Super Bowl of the Art World”, as Tom Wolfe called it in his Miami novel, “Back to Blood”). Tourism is at record levels. Miami is the only American city besides New York in the top ten of Knight Frank’s 2014 global-cities index, which ranks cities by their attractiveness to the ultra-wealthy. (It comes seventh, ahead of Paris.) Property is still far cheaper than in most other cities on the list (see chart).

Miami’s Downtown Development Authority (DDA) is dangling the city’s low taxes and lovely weather in front of companies to persuade them to move there. This is starting to bear fruit, especially in finance: Universa, a $6 billion hedge fund in California, recently agreed to relocate, following part of Eddie Lampert’s ESL. SABMiller, a giant brewer, has moved its Latin American head office from Colombia. .

“I lived a long time in New York, but here [in Miami] it’s easier to make something from nothing,” enthuses Nitin Motwani, a DDA board member, who talks of the city’s skyline one day resembling Manhattan’s. Mr Zalewski is more cautious. Miami’s property market is “a great game”, he says, but “all it would take to send a chill through the entire market is one big project to go sideways.” Developers who joke about Viagra should keep some aspirin within reach, just in case.