Thursday, December 3, 2015

Forged deeds lead to stolen homes, broken hearts in South Florida

Forged deeds lead to stolen homes, broken hearts in South Florida 

The house in Northwest Hialeah belonged to the Cleland family since the mid-1950s.
Linda Cleland, an only child, watched her mother plant a pine sapling that grew to tower over the home in the front yard. Eventually, her parents aged there, fell ill and died years apart. Cleland’s two dogs are buried in the home’s yard.

The house remained hers — until an April day when police suddenly came to evict Cleland, leaving her homeless while fighting to get her property back.

“My house was stolen from me. I couldn’t believe it was happening,” said Cleland, 60. “All my property was put in bags and tossed outside like garbage.”

In a scam that authorities say has proliferated in recent years, Cleland fell victim to swindlers who used bogus quitclaim deeds to secretly strip her of the property, then sold the home to a Pembroke Pines investment firm.

Spurred by cases like Cleland’s, the Miami-Dade Inspector General’s Office and prosecutors in recent weeks have begun meeting with the clerk of courts to figure out new procedures aimed at curbing quitclaim deed fraud.

“It’s just too easy to steal somebody’s property by filing a fraudulent quitclaim deed,” Miami-Dade Inspector General Mary Cagle told the Miami Herald and news partner WFOR-CBS4.

For seven months, Cleland lived on the streets, occasionally crashing with friends, usually sleeping in a grassy area outside the nearby Palm Springs Methodist Church. This week, with help from Legal Services of Greater Miami, a civil judge ordered Cleland be allowed to return to the three-bedroom home.

“She had been feeling hopeless, but I definitively saw a sense of relief. She was stoic,” said Legal Services attorney Lissette Labrousse.

OIG investigators are still probing Cleland's case and no arrests have been made.

A quitclaim deed allows a property owner to quickly transfer it to someone else. The document must be notarized and can be filed to the clerk of courts in person, via mail or through the Internet.

Investigators with the OIG believe the swindlers scour neighborhoods looking for abandoned or dilapidated homes in which the owners appear to have died. Fake quitclaim deeds are filed transferring ownership of the homes to “straw buyers,” who turn around and sell the homes.

Exactly how many fraudulent quitclaim deeds are filed with the clerk’s office is unknown, authorities say, but there are so many that police cannot come close to investigating them all.

“These scammers are usually very clever people who try and get around what you do,” said Miami-Dade Clerk of Courts Harvey Ruvin. “We’re trying to stay a step ahead of them.”
Some of the remedies being considered: photocopying IDs of people who file quitclaim deeds in person, retaining clerk of courts security footage for longer periods of time and creating a complaint hotline at the state attorney’s office.

At least one major prosecution of a suspected quitclaim deed scammer is under way. The chief suspect is Yohany Garcia, 38.

Prosecutors in 2012 accused her and a group of others of bilking prospective home buyers out of over $2 million. Garcia and others claimed they could sell people homes that were to be auctioned for simply the price of delinquent taxes, according to the state.

While awaiting trial in that case, prosecutors said, Garcia this year tried to use two homes as collateral to help her bail out of jail.

But according to an arrest warrant, OIG investigator Juan Koop found that both homes had been stolen using fake quitclaim deeds. The real owners had died and the properties had languished in the hands of relatives.

Her defense attorney, Scott Sakin, said prosecutors do not “have a lot of evidence connecting her to wrongdoing.”

“They don’t have her going to the recorder’s office to file false documents,” Sakin said. “There is nothing connecting her to the case except people who don’t like her and cut a deal. It’s a typical snitch case.”

This type of forgery is not necessarily new either.

One decade ago, the Inspector General’s office arrested two people for using bogus quitclaim deeds to steal and sell homes of dead or sickly people. In response, the clerk of courts began automatically sending letters to the last person who paid the tax bill, notifying them that a quitclaim deed had been filed on their property.

Ruvin believes the letters have helped thwart some swindlers — in October alone, the clerk’s office sent 1,507 quitclaim deed notifications. But investigators believe some of the crooks actually retrieve the letters from mailboxes.

At least one letter made it into Cleland’s hands, but only because she happened to check her mail just as the mailman was delivering it to her box. Cleland wrote a letter to the court declaring she had been the victim of fraud – but a judge nonetheless ordered she be evicted from her home.

Exactly why and how Cleland’s house was targeted is unclear.

But in March 2014, someone filed a bogus quitclaim deed purporting to be from Linda Cleland transferring the property into the name of her mother, Louise Cleland. “My mother had been dead, at that time, for close to 11 years,” Linda Cleland said.

The form was supposedly witnessed by a notary named Kent Taylor — someone who does not exist.
The next month, a second sham quitclaim deed sent the property from Louise Cleland to a company called JSM Construccion Corp, an entity started by a handyman named Julio S. Morales.

By July 2014, Morales had sold the house for $100,000 to Stark Equity Group, of Pembroke Pines, which has no idea the property had been stolen. The company eventually had her evicted in April.
A judge on Monday ordered the eviction order be vacated. The legal fight is not over. Cleland’s lawyer will now ask a circuit court to return the title of the home to her. Stark Equity’s lawyer did not return a call for comment.

“These criminals are heartless. What they do is they prey upon the most vulnerable, the ones who are almost going to be homeless, the elderly,” Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle told Natalia Zea of WFOR-CBS4. “We also know there are probably many other victims out there and we want to make sure they reach out to us so we can take action quickly.”

Reprint and Copyright Courtesy of Miami Herald - By David Ovalle


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article47675590.html#emlnl=5-Minute_Herald#storylink=cpy
Reprint

Friday, November 13, 2015

HUD eases FHA condo financing rules

HUD eases FHA condo financing rules

 
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Ed Golding announced changes to FHA condominium policies last night at the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) convention in San Diego.

Effective immediately, FHA will streamline the condominium recertification process and expand its definition of acceptable "owner-occupied" units to include second homes not owned by investors. The provisions expire in one year "until the agency can implement a more comprehensive condominium rule change."

The change should qualify more condo complexes for FHA loans. That, in turn, will give more buyers access to FHA low-downpayment mortgages.

The new rule:
  1. Modifies the requirements for condominium project recertification
  2. Revises the calculation of FHA's required owner-occupancy percentage
  3. Expands eligible condominium project insurance coverages
Florida homebuyers, perhaps more than any other state, will benefit from FHA's new rule.
"This is going to be an amazing stimulus to the housing market for the first-time homeowner and entry-level housing buyer," says Frank Kowalski, president of Florida Realtors in 2005 and an insurance agent. "It's a catalyst for change and long overdue. Thousands of contracts could not use FHA financing, and buyers were forced to come up with 25 – even 30 percent downpayments."
Kowalski says FHA's rule change should help more than just first-time buyers, however. Condo financing problems also frustrated the move-up market – condo owners who want to make the move to single-family housing.

"It's difficult to sell an existing unit if you can't find a qualified buyer," Kowalski says. "A lot of people are frozen in place: Those in (a condo unit) can't get out; those out can't get in."

According to Golding, the just-announced FHA changes are in line with ones requested by NAR, which has been an advocate for reform. NAR cited problems with a lengthy and complex recertification process, burdensome owner-occupancy requirements, and the limits on acceptable property insurance.

One major benefit for Florida condo owners: the property insurance rule change. FHA will now accept Citizens Property Insurance coverage – the Florida-owned company and largest condo insurer in the state.

In addition, FHA changed the way it will view co-insurance clauses, which exist with most Florida condos. That change alone will help up to 85 percent of Florida's condo associations, according to Danielle Blake, the Miami Association of Realtors' government affairs director and a long-time advocate for FHA change.

According to Golding, insurance and recertification changes will take place immediately. Policy changes related to owner occupancy, commercial space percentage, FHA concentration and spot approvals would be addressed through formal rulemaking in the near future.

"Condos are often the most affordable option for homebuyers, especially first-time buyers, and making sure FHA financing is an option is important to supporting homeownership," says 2015 NAR President Chris Polychron.

HUD provides an overview of all changes in Mortgagee Letter 2015-27, which is posted online.
Aritcle reprint courtesy of and © 2015 Florida Realtors®  Original post appears here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=1&id=330467

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

3 Credit Repair Scams to Avoid

Freddie Mac warns buyers of 3 credit scams

 
Freddie Mac issued a warning for homebuyers about scams that entice them by promising to raise their credit score in exchange for money.

"Who doesn't want the highest credit score possible to garner the most-favored terms?" Freddie Mac notes on its website. "For many Americans with consumer credit negatively impacted by the housing crisis and fluctuating economy, it's easy to be lured by the promise of a raised credit score," Freddie Mac says. "Schemes that falsely raise credit scores will land borrowers in scalding hot water – as well as cost you time and money combating both origination- and servicing-related fraud."

Freddie Mac highlighted three types of common fraud schemes to raise credit scores:

1. Disputing credit with credit bureaus
A new program with FICO – called FICO Score Open Access for Credit & Financial Counseling – was created to help borrowers who have credit management problems by providing FICO Scores along with credit education material to help consumers understand credit scoring and learn more about financial management. However, some fraudsters are using the program in a scam.

"(Scammers) may direct a borrower to contact credit repositories repeatedly to dispute previously defaulted debt," Freddie Mac warns. "The fraudster hopes the creditor will miss responding to one of the disputes and the defaulted debt will disappear temporarily, triggering a jump in the borrower's credit score. The borrower may qualify for – and close on – a new mortgage before the credit report correctly reflects the defaulted debt and the borrower's true credit score."

2. Claiming identity theft falsely
Some companies encourage buyers to falsely claim identity theft on their loan application in order to have debt removed from their credit report.

"Some borrowers who falsely claimed identify theft have gone as far as providing affidavits of identity theft and police reports," Freddie Mac writes. "Of course, lenders take these claims seriously and investigate. In some instances, they discover that the 'police report' is fake, never actually filed, or from a police department that doesn't exist."

3. Misusing credit protection numbers
Using a credit privacy number – an alternative for a Social Security number most commonly used by celebrities and politicians to hide previous credit issues – can be a dangerous move.

"Some consumers with poor credit acquire a CPN with the intent of creating a new, clean – and misleading – credit profile," Freddie Mac notes. "CPNs were not created for this purpose, and mortgage loans originated using a CPN are ineligible for sale to Freddie Mac. Borrowers who use a CPN with the hope of leaving their bad credit histories in the rear view mirror are in for a rude awakening."

As the Federal Trade Commission bluntly points out, "By using a stolen number as your own, the con artists have involved you in identity theft,' for which you may face legal trouble."

Source: "Freddie Mac Issues Credit-Scam Warning to Potential Home Owners," HousingWire (Nov. 6, 2015)

Repost courtesy of and © Copyright 2015 INFORMATION, INC. Bethesda, MD (301) 215-4688. Original article appeared here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=1&id=330299

Monday, November 9, 2015

Live in Miami and Work in Orlando? Yes, It's Possible

Passenger train to quickly link Miami and Orlando

 
A privately owned and operated passenger rail service is on track to begin connecting travelers in four major Florida cities by mid-2017.

Today, All Aboard Florida is slated to reveal that the new express inter-city train travel service, which will cost more than $3 billion to build, will be called the Brightline.

Brightline trains will connect Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Orlando along a 235-mile route. The stretch from Miami to Orlando will last three hours, comparable to what it takes to get to the airport, go through security and fly, developers say.

The trains, designed by the Rockwell Group, are being built in Sacramento by Siemens. Construction has begun on stations in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach, and on connecting urban centers that developers hope will become dining and shopping destinations. Another station will be next to Orlando International Airport.

All Aboard Florida is a wholly owned subsidiary of Florida East Coast Industries, which is involved in a range of infrastructure, transportation and real estate businesses. The project is being funded by private investors through the issuance of $1.75 billion in tax-exempt bonds and directly from the parent company. The company expects to become profitable in the first couple of years as it adds more trains and ridership increases.

All Aboard Florida and tourism officials say the trains and their stations could transform travel throughout Florida, one of the country's most populous states. Providing trains as an alternative could ease congestion on the roads and alleviate pressure on crowded airports.

"Half of our business is international," says William Talbert, president and CEO of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. "To connect Miami and those other three communities by train makes it convenient, affordable, clean and safe to travel. It gives the visitor options that we haven't had before."

Not everyone is on board with the new train service, however. Citizens Against Rail Expansion, a coalition of residents and community leaders in South Florida, argues that the rail system will compromise public safety. A number of hospitals along the route are on one side of the tracks while first responders are on the other, says Stephen Ryan, an attorney representing CARE.

What is now a single-track system will likely change to a double-track at various points along the way, which will pose a danger for school buses trying to cross over, Ryan says. The number of freight trains will also increase, he says. Another reason for concern that the group has brought up: It will harm the maritime industry because it will increase wait times at drawbridges that the train will cross. All that will result in a drop in property values, which will impact tax rolls, he says.

The group also questions All Aboard Florida's insistence that the project is fully privately funded. The use of tax-exempt bonds, Ryan says, is essentially a federal subsidy.

"There are profound issues for the local economy," he says.

All Aboard Florida says that no federal government entity will have exposure to the investment, and that train travel is needed to improve the quality of life.

Trains were the primary mode of transportation in the USA until after World War II, when cars and airlines took over the roads and skies. Federally funded Amtrak has remained the predominant interstate passenger train system, but it does not offer the kind of high-speed service found in Europe and Asia.

The closest thing the USA has to high-speed trains is Amtrak's Acela on the northeast corridor, which can go as fast as 150 mph. Brightline trains will not be high-speed, but its express service will be able to go up to 125 mph.

High-speed rail "takes more money and fully dedicated track and electrification," says Andy Kunz, president and CEO of the U.S. High Speed Rail Association.

There's been a recent resurgence in interest in trains, particularly among younger travelers, says Jim Wallington, a train expert at America by Rail, which promotes train travel. "This younger generation is less car prone," he says. "They are not buying cars like we used to, and they are demanding that there be alternate transportation."

President Obama's 2009 stimulus bill proposed billions of dollars in funding to create a true high-speed rail system across the nation. His efforts have stalled amid political opposition.

Privately led efforts are underway to create high-speed rail systems in Texas and between Las Vegas and Los Angeles. A publicly led high-speed rail system is under construction in California. That will eventually connect Los Angeles and San Francisco in less than three hours.

Reprint Courtesy of and Copyright 2014, USATODAY.com, USA TODAY, Nancy Trejos. Original post appeared here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=4&id=330245

Monday, November 2, 2015

Burgers, Buildings and More Coming to Boca Raton Soon

Burgers, buildings and more coming to Boca Raton soon

Boca Raton is nearly out of land, so developers are building on small parcels, or redoing existing properties, to make way for new homes and shops.

One shopping center under construction now is Park Place by Schmier & Feurring Properties on Military Trail, south of Clint Moore Road and Office Depot’s world headquarters.
In addition to a Fresh Market grocery store, Park Place will host a cornucopia of restaurants, too.
So far they include a new location of the Habit Burger chain, another Chipotle location and a new player in the South Florida dining market, Burton’s Grill, a modern American concept from Boston.
Also coming: a new location for Raw Juice, the growing Boca Raton-based fresh juice and vegan food eatery, and Phenomenon, a nitrogen-based ice cream concept. Restaurateur Burt Rapoport also plans Rappy’s Deli, which is billed as a modern spin on the classic Jewish deli.

Shops also are planned for the 64,000-square-foot center, which will open in 2016 and be built in an elegant, contemporary design “with unbelievable areas and energy for customers,” said Ross Feurring, the project’s director of leasing.

“There’s no new development in Boca Raton, so if you want to get in this market, this is one of the only opportunities,” Feurring said.

He’s right. Boca Raton has its longstanding clusters of commerce, such as the Town Center mall in the city’s center, and the mixed-use Mizner Park downtown.

But increasingly, developers are snapping up smaller pieces of land, or redoing existing buildings, to make way for new stores, condos or apartments.

“Boca Raton is developed to a large extent, and now it’s ripe for redevelopment and infill,” said Nader Salour, of Cypress Realty, based in Jupiter.

The 64,000-square-foot Park Place, for instance, sits on just 16 acres. To its south is a vacant 10-acre parcel, now under construction for 298 apartments by Altman Development Corp.

Meanwhile, Salour is working on a mixed-use project also planned for Military Trail near the mall. He and partners own a 10-acre site. On it sits an old bowling alley, now doing business as Strikes@Boca bowling alley, and nearby, a shuttered Scandinavian gym.

Salour is seeking the city’s OK to build 200 apartments and 65,000 square feet of retail space. “It’s a prime location surrounded by very attractive buildings,” including office buildings, Salour said.
Salour said the high-end apartments he plans to build will fill a need for people who now commute into Boca Raton to work because there aren’t enough rental projects in the city.

Several properties around the Town Center mall also are undergoing a renaissance.

Across from Salour’s property sits Boca Center, an office, shopping, dining and hotel complex also slated for a redevelopment. 

Developer Tom Crocker last year reacquired this center, which he originally built. Now he plans a massive upgrade. A high-end gym, new restaurants and development along Military Trail (now home to a parking lot) all are in the works. The idea is to turn the Boca Center into a luxury food and entertainment mecca.

Boca Center’s proximity to the Town Center mall, in the heart of the city, makes it prime property for restaurants eager to do business in the city, said Tom Prakas, of Prakas & Co. in Boca Raton. Prakas is handling leasing for the center.

Crocker also plans to create a “restaurant row” along Butts Road, on property he owns next to his Wells Fargo office building, Prakas said.

In addition, Crocker is looking to add a restaurant to another of his Boca Raton office properties: One Town Center, a Class A, 10-story office building that once was home to Tyco’s headquarters. Plans are to create a 5,000-square-foot restaurant downstairs, with patio space outside along Town Center Road.

Boca Raton’s building boom is no surprise to longtime real estate professional Keith O’Donnell, a principal with Avison Young in Boca Raton.

The city’s ranking on Livability’s 100 Best Places to Live means a renewed interest in adding to the city’s offerings of homes, shops and offices. Boca Raton was ranked 59th, based on an analysis of each cities’ amenities, economy, education, health care and other factors.

O’Donnell said activity in the city is divided among the eastern section of the city, where the downtown is seeing the construction of mixed-use projects, apartments and condos; the central portion of the city, around the mall; and the northwest section in and around the Arvida Park of Commerce, traditionally home to headquarters and research companies. A number of mixed-use projects also are planned there, he said.

Some 20 years ago, the thought of residential housing in the city’s largely ghost-townlike downtown was unthinkable. Now, however, several projects are in the works or underway, including Palmetto Promenade’s apartments and shops along Palmetto Park Road.

“Downtown is seeing a vibrancy it hasn’t seen in the residential sector,” O’Donnell said, “which will drive more retail demand.”

Reprint courtesy and copyright by Palm Beach Post and author By Alexandra Clough - Palm Beach Post Staff Writer. Alexandra Clough writes about the economy, real estate and the law. Original post here: http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/business/burgers-buildings-and-more-coming-to-boca-raton-so/npCTB/

7 Property Descriptions That Concern Buyers

7 property descriptions that concern buyers

 
Some words in listing ads can send red flags to potential buyers. CBS' MoneyWatch recently asked five real estate professionals to weigh in. Here are the words they say buyers should watch out for:

1. "As is." Sellers list a home "as is" when they don't want to do any of the needed repairs.
"They feel they're putting their best price out there, and they don't want to get stuck with a buyer nickel-and-diming them for every repair," says Deb Tomaro, a real estate professional in Bloomington, Ind. However, buyers may have a tougher time getting a bank to agree to a mortgage with an "as is" home.

Also, seemingly small fixes – like an unfinished floor or broken window – may become deal-breakers for the bank. Buyers would still be wise to have a property inspection and try to negotiate with the sellers on some repairs, even for an "as is" home, Tomaro says.

2. "All work has been done for you." "That generally means it's a flipper," says Elizabeth Weintraub, a real estate professional in Sacramento, Calif., who added buyers may also want to be leery of phrases like "total remodel" and "completely rehabbed."

Investors may purchase a home at a bargain price below market value and then remodel and try to resell it for a profit. "They make cosmetic changes as quickly and cheaply as possible," Weintraub says. "All they have to do is put in stainless steel appliances and granite countertops, and someone is going to want to buy it."

Buyers should make sure that shiny facades aren't hiding serious defects, such as mold, water damage or an unstable foundation.

3. "Cash transactions only." A listing may specify that a sale will be cash only, which could signal there could be something majorly wrong with the home. "That's one of the most useful real estate lingo things [to watch for]," says Jon Boyd, an Ann Arbor, Mich., real estate professional. "This means there could be an issue with the house that may make it difficult to qualify for a traditional mortgage."

4. "Vacant." You might not see this written in the property description, but an unfurnished home in the property photos online likely means the home is vacant, which could also send a warning signal to buyers – and buyers may be wise to find out how long the home has stood vacant.
Homes unoccupied for a long time could develop severe maintenance problems, such as burst water pipes or mold. Boyd recommends buyers get a thorough inspection done and have the utilities turned on to check for issues before buying.

5. "TLC." "I think 'TLC' is probably the most commonly used description for when [sellers] don't want to say it's a fixer," says Weintraub. "When they say it just needs a little TLC to make the home shine, that means it needs a complete remodel."

6. "Land lease buildings." In larger cities – such as New York – this may be an item a buyer will see, which indicates that the building is built on leased land. That means when a building's lease expires, the owner will have to negotiate a new one and that could mean higher prices for everyone involved. Monthly assessments – maintenance fees that apartment owners pay the building – could escalate.

"Everyone's monthly payments skyrocket, and they have to reduce the purchase price so buyers can afford those payments," says Brad Malow, a New York area real estate professional and founder of BuyingNYC.com. That could make the place tougher to sell later on.

7. "Bring your own toolbox." A listing that uses this phrase may sound like just a few cosmetic fixes are needed, but it could signify much larger projects.

"There was one house in my market that said to bring your own toolbox, and it had $15,000 in basement repair projects," Boyd says. "Those kinds of tools are not normally in anybody's toolbox."

Source: "10 Signs of a Scary Real Estate Listing," CBS MoneyWatch (Oct. 27, 2015)
Reprint courtesy of and © Copyright 2015 INFORMATION, INC. Bethesda, MD (301) 215-4688. Original post here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=1&id=329889

Friday, October 30, 2015

Paramount World Center - Condominimum Residences Available

Paramount - Miami World Center
Now Under Contract:
1, 2, and 3-bedroom Residences
Starting in the Mid-$700,000s



The Mall at Miami World Center
Two of the most sophisticated and world-renowned retailers,
with over 100 years of combined experience and successful
track records, join together to help build the future of
Downtown Miami.

For More Information, Please Contact Branon Edwards at 786-417-4910 or
Branon@InvestFloridaRealty.com

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Miami One of the Top Real Estate Markets for Investors

3 Florida cities in top 10 for real estate investors

Need some guidelines for making choices for real estate investment? Well, help has arrived.

BiggerPockets just released its Real Estate Investment Market Index indicating the hottest markets to get the most out of your money.
Using criteria such as home purchase prices, appreciation and rental prices, BiggerPockets listed the 10 best cities for investment in 2015 – and also 10 cities where real estate investment may be a riskier bet.

Best places to invest and percentage of return

1. Dallas: 19.5% return.

2. Denver: 18.9% return.

3. Miami: 18.6% return.

4. Houston: 18.5% return.

5. Atlanta: 16.5% return.

6. Tampa: 16.4% return.

7. Detroit: 16.2% return.

8. Austin, Texas: 15.6% return.

9. Las Vegas: 15.3% return.

10. Orlando: 14.9% return.


Cities where investing may NOT be a good option

1. Hartford, Conn.: 4.4% return.

2. Salt Lake City: 5.4% return.

3. Louisville, Ky.: 5.7% return.

4. Milwaukee: 5.9% return.

5. Washington, D.C.: 6.4% return.

6. Los Angeles: 6.5% return.

7. Baltimore: 6.7% return.

8. New York: 7.1% return.

9. Boston: 7.4% return.

10. Birmingham, Alabama: 7.7% return.

Sources: "The 10 Best (and Worst) Cities for Investing in Real Estate May Surprise You," realtor.com. and "Bigger Pockets Real Estate Investment Market Index: The Best (and Worst) Major Markets for Real Estate Investors, 2015," The BiggerPockets Blog.

Reprint courtesy of and © Copyright 2015 INFORMATION, INC. Bethesda, MD (301) 215-4688. Original post here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=1&id=329751

48 Ways to Speed a House Sale

Want to speed up the sale of your house?


Evaluate
1. Have a Realtor, interior decorator, or professional organizer walk through your home to evaluate what needs to be updated, repaired, or removed.

Repair
2. Patch damaged walls
3. Replaced cracked floor tiles
4. Oil squeaky doors
5. Fix sticky windows
6. Fix leaky faucets and toilets
7. Re-caulk tubs and sinks
8. Replace broken windows and screens

Update
9. Replace cabinet knobs and pulls
10. Update lighting fixures, if needed.
11. Update blinds, if needed
12. Replace faucets and shower heads, if needed

Paint
13. Paint the interior in neutral colors
14. Paint exterior doors and window trim
15. Paint shutters
16. Repaint exterior, if needed

Brighten
17. Take down heavy window treatments that block light
18. Wash all windows
19. Increase the wattage of light bulbs
20. Replace dark lamp shades

Depersonalize
21. Remove family photos
22. Store knickknacks

De-Clutter
23. Thin out the books on your shelves
24. Empty kitchen counters
25. Place out-of-season clothing in storage
26. Rent a storage unit to store unneeded items

Organize
27. Organize pantry
28. Organize closets
29. Organize basement
30. Organize garage and shed

Clean
31. Clean all interior surfaces
32. Wash windows and doors
33. Air out and clean in cabinets and under sinks
34. Power wash exterior of house and sidewalks
35. Clean outdoor furniture
36. Clean porch lights of cobwebs and debris

Hide Signs of Pets
37. Remove pet smells
38. Hide pet food and bowls
39. Take pets for a walk during showings or send them to day care during open houses

Stage Inside
40. Reduce the amount of furniture in each room
41. Organize furniture to create seating areas and give each part of the home a purpose
42. Place cut flowers around home during showings

Prune and Landscape
43. Remove dead plants
44. Prune or replace overgrown shrubs
45. Fill open spots with seasonal flowers
46. Add fresh mulch to beds

Stage Outside
47. Make sure front porch/entryway is clean and inviting
48. Use outdoor furniture to create inviting living spaces

Please contact Branon Edwards at 786-417-4910 or
Branon@InvestFloridaRealty.com to Schedule Your Consultation.

Freestanding Restaurant on Dixie Highway For Sale


Asking $1,850,000

Your chance to own the iconic Ambrosia Restaurant Building. Free standing building on the corner of Palm Street and South Dixie across from the Norton Museum amidst lots of redevelopment. Building originally 2 units opened to single unit. Seats 96, 17 parking. Business available separately or take all at $2.35mm. Front dining room temporarily leased as dry cleaner pick up/drop off.

View the brochure in the multiple listing service here:
http://southfloridamls.com/DotNet/Pub/EmailView.aspx?r=449343207&s=FLL&t=FLL

The Norton Museum of Art is planning a $60 Million complex directly across Palm Avenue from this building.

Here are a few articles on the corridor that you may find of interest:
http://ireader.olivesoftware.com/Olive/iReader/PalmBeachPost/SharedArticle.ashx?document=PBC\2015\06\07&article=Ar05100
http://inhabitat.com/foster-partners-add-their-magic-touch-to-norton-museum-of-art-in-west-palm-beach/
http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/news/2015/03/16/contractor-hired-for-expansion-of-west-palm-beach.html


Please Contact Branon Edwards at 786-417-4910 or
Branon@InvestFloridaRealty.com For More Information or a Personal Tour

Punta Gorda Isles, Sailboat Gulf Access For Sale

"The Castle" in Punta Gorda Isles is For Sale!

A well-known landmark in the 'Bird Section' of Punta Gorda Isles, this custom home was built in 2008.

You can view the property brochure in the Multiple Listing Service here:
http://southfloridamls.com/DotNet/Pub/EmailView.aspx?r=1564511982&s=FLL&t=FLL

"The Castle of Punta Gorda Isles" - finally for sale, this unique custom home features a builder's half-acre lot w/10,000lb boat lift & Sailboat Gulf Access! Located in the Bird Section of PGI, the home has 3-bedrooms, den, gym, 3.5-baths, formal living room, formal dining room, family room & breakfast area overlooking the covered patio and screened lanai with heated pool/Jacuzzi/bbq. Lush mature landscaping, a turret enclosing the 2-story tower shower, panic room & 40ft RV garage make it an area icon.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

29 Ways It Pays to Work with a Realtor


• Determine how much home you can afford.
• Price existing home without the input of a market expert.
• Check credit report.
• Put existing house on the market.
• Decide where to advertise to reach best potential buyers.
• Host open house to sell existing home.
• Schedule appointments to show current home or to see new ones.
• Find new home with all the features you want.
• Investigate school system.
• Research neighborhoods and local amenities.
• Analyze comparable home sales and make offer on new home.
• Review homeowners’ association documents on new home.
• Meet home and pest inspectors for review of current home.
• Arrange home and pest inspections of new home.
• Drafts the contract to purchase your new home.
• Review and approve contract.
• Negotiate terms of sale or purchase including repairs or concessions.
• Get signed contract to seller.
• Hire attorney or title company to complete closing research.
• Choose mortgage lender.
• Hire surveyor to survey property.
• Order title search.
• Obtain title insurance.
• Review and approve closing costs.
• Obtain homeowners’ insurance.
• Conduct final walk-throughs of home.
• Coordinate closing with lender, title company, and customer.
• Review and sign closing documents.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Should You Hire A Realtor?

Why should you hire a Realtor?


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Branon A. Edwards, Broker for Aqualand Real Estate, LLC represents buyers and sellers of real estate in South Florida, particularly Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach Counties. Whether you're looking to buy, sell, rent, or have your property managed professionally, Aqualand is a full-service real estate brokerage.

Call Branon Today at 786-417-4910

or email him at Branon@InvestFloridaRealty.com


Thank you for the opportunity to earn your business.

Rents Are Going Up Again... Are You Ready to Buy Instead?

Renting? Brace yourself. It’s going to cost more

 
Rents skyrocketed in 2014 and many analysts didn't think those escalating costs could continue – but they were wrong so far. Rising rents have yet to slow in 2015 – and in fact, rents have gotten higher – and the increases likely will continue into next year.

Annual rent growth in September was 5.2 percent – the highest since 2011, according to Axiometrics, an apartment research firm. That also marks the eighth consecutive month the rate has been 5 percent or higher. A year ago, annual rent growth was 4.1 percent.

"The eight months the rate has been above 5 percent is the longest sustained period of strength we have seen," says Stephanie McCleskey, vice president of research at Axiometrics. "The last growth cycle was only four years, and this cycle is already five years long – with no sign of stopping."
Apartment construction has been increasing to meet rising demand, but some say it's still falling far too short.

"New inventory coming to market is weighted to the high end – it's urban, Class A, with a rich set of amenities, targeting the coveted college-educated millennial," Sam Chandan, president of Chandan Economics, told CNBC. "Overall, we still have an affordability crisis in the United States with rents rising faster than incomes for the fourth-consecutive year."

In September, apartment vacancies were low – at 95.3 percent occupied nationally. Axiometrics considers anything above 95 percent as a "full" market.

But weak income growth may not support rent growths much longer in some markets.
"There is only so hard you can push on rents," Chandan says.

Some studies are showing that it is more affordable to buy a home than rent. But inventory constraints in the for-sale market – particularly on the lower end – can keep renters renting and unable to save for a downpayment due to the high rental costs.

Lately, rent gains are highest in cities with boom tech sectors, such as Seattle, Denver and Portland, Ore. Rental prices are also above average in Nashville, Tenn., Charlotte. N.C., and several cities in Florida, Axiometrics reports.

"Younger, newly formed households continue to move out of their parents' or roommate living arrangements and rent an apartment, driving up the demand for more rental units," says David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders.

Meanwhile, homebuilders – such as Lennar and Toll Brothers – are adding more rental apartments to their mix.

"Thirty-five percent of new home starts in 2015 have been multi-unit," CNBC reports. "That is higher than a year ago and the highest share since 1973. Developers are simply going to where demand is highest and most lucrative."

Reprint Courtesy of Source: "Think Your Rent's Too Darn High? Just Wait," CNBC (Oct. 20, 2015)
© Copyright 2015 INFORMATION, INC. Bethesda, MD (301) 215-4688 Original Post Here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=5&id=329554

Friday, September 25, 2015

Florida's Real Estate Rebound the Strongest in the Nation

Fla. real estate rebound strongest in nation

 
MCLEAN, Va. – Freddie Mac's latest Multi-Indicator Market Index (MiMi) finds that the Florida real estate market's rebound leads the nation. In a city-by-city comparison, Orlando leads the nation in both a month-to-month and year-to-year comparison, and only one non-Florida city makes the top five list for either timeframe.

Florida comparisons
Month-over-month, Florida's index score rose 2.0 percent. It was followed by Colorado (+1.99%), New Jersey (+1.83%), Connecticut (+1.80%) and Nevada (+1.48%).

Year-over-year, Florida's index grew by 14.35 percent. It was followed by Oregon (+13.45%), Nevada (12.18%), Colorado (+11.65%), and Washington (+10.18%).

Florida metro comparisons
Orlando topped all city lists from Freddie Mac. Month-to-month, Orlando improved 2.6 percent, followed by Greenville, S.C. (+2.55%), Cape Coral (+2.51%), Tampa (+2.19%) and Jacksonville (+2.12%).

Year-to-year, Orlando improved 18.27 percent, followed by Cape Coral (+17.75%), Tampa (+15.99%), Palm Bay (+14.98%) and North Port (+14.77%).

"Florida has some of the most improving housing markets in the country, largely a reflection of more borrowers becoming current on their mortgage payments as the local employment picture improves and house prices rebound," says Freddie Mac Deputy Chief Economist Len Kiefer. "Nationally, all MiMi indicators are heading in the right direction for the second consecutive month and improving more than 6 percent from the same time last year."

U.S. numbers
Nationally, Freddie Mac added one more name to its list of slowly stabilizing markets: Rhode Island. It also added four cities: Philadelphia and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Phoenix, Arizona; and Albany, New York.

The national MiMi value stands at 81, indicating a housing market that is on its outer range of stable housing activity. The number improved 0.93 percent month-to-month and 6.17 percent year-to-year. Since it's all-time low in October 2010, the MiMi has improved 37%.

Reprint courtesy of and © 2015 Florida Realtors®. Original post here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=1&id=328460

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Rents Will Continue to Rise - Time to Buy?

By 2025, 13M will pay 50% of income for housing

 
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – The number of households spending more than 50 percent of their income on rent is expected to rise at least 11 percent – from 11.8 million to 13.1 million – by 2025, according to new research by Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies (JCHS) and Enterprise Community Partners Inc. (Enterprise).

The study, Projecting Trends in Severely Cost-Burdened Renters: 2015-2025, says the U.S. will have a growing renter affordability crisis, with the largest increases expected among older adults, Hispanics and single-person households.

According to the study authors, a rental crisis will occur even if current income trends and rent trends turn more favorable because a variety of demographic forces – including the rapid growth of minority and senior populations – will continue to exert pressure on the number of severely cost-burdened renters.

"Our analysis shows that even in the unlikely event that income growth greatly outpaces rent gains, the number of severely cost-burdened renters will remain near current record levels," says Christopher Herbert, managing director of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. "Given these data, it is critical for policymakers at all levels of government to prioritize the preservation and development of affordable rental housing as there are simply not enough quality, affordable rental units to provide housing for the millions of households paying over half their income in rental costs."

Trends projected in the report for 2015-2025
  • The number of severely burdened households aged 65-74 will rise 42.1%
  • The number of severely burdened households aged 75 and older will rise by 38.9%
  • The number of Hispanic households with severe renter burdens will increase 27.3%
  • The number of severely burdened single-person households will jump by 12.0%
The Harvard study suggests that the U.S. already has problems housing all its lower-income renters.
"At last measure, 11.2 million extremely low-income households competed for 7.3 million homes affordable to them – a 3.9 million home shortfall," say study authors. "Just over a quarter of eligible very low-income households received rental assistance, leaving 7.7 million unassisted very low-income renters with worst case housing needs in 2013 according to HUD. "Meanwhile, the private sector is unable to supply new homes at rents low enough to reach low-income renters: The median rent of a newly constructed apartment of $1,290 was equal to about half the median renter's monthly household income."

Reprint courtesy of and © 2015 Florida Realtors®. The original post appeared here: http://www.floridarealtors.org/NewsAndEvents/article.cfm?p=1&id=328320

Monday, September 21, 2015

Hot Neighborhoods in South Florida - Miami and Broward Infographics

Locked out of boom, buyers hunt for new housing hot spots

Lionel Lightbourne, a social worker, and his wife, Tanya, a teacher, have been renting in Ives Estates near Miami Gardens while they search for a home. Locked out of boom, buyers hunt for new housing hot spots


 
South Florida’s middle-class buyers struggle to find affordable homes
Wages aren’t keeping up with skyrocketing home values
Even so, pockets of affordability remain in both Miami-Dade and Broward counties

By Nicholas Nehamas

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/business/real-estate-news/article35702148.html#emlnl=5-Minute_Herald#storylink=cpy