Cape Coral is the highest rising home prices

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The very serious Real Estate section of Yahoo has brought something very interesting a couple of months ago, and a very good news for people who bought a home in Cape Coral in the past 12 months. And not only in the Cape Coral real estate but also all around, like Lehigh Acres or Fort Myers. The good news is that Cape Coral is the highest rising home prices in the U.S.!

Price differences show an increase of 12.1% for the last 12 months far ahead from Bridgeport-Stamford in Connecticut, but with still a median price of$100,000 for a typical 3 bedrooms 2 bathrooms house. But the number of foreclosure is still important with 1 foreclosure for every 92 homes. That alone will probably decrease the price rise into the single digit. It will remain steady in my opinion though because the median price is still the lowest nationwide, but steady because more and more people see a perfect place to retire when they think about the sunshine state.

Cape Coral italian style foreclosure for sale

Cape Coral italian style foreclosure for sale

The city of Cape Coral show only a 4 months’ supply of properties, which has to rise prices and demand. Lehigh Acres has only a 1 month’s supply and the rumor about how secure is the city is decreasing as well. People begin to realize that crimes in Lehigh Acres were made by A/C, pool and water system professionals in search of free parts by stealing A/C, pool equipment and water system equipment from abandoned foreclosed houses there. Those foreclosure having disappearing rapidly, those parts are no longer available and crimes rate has melted like snow under the sun.

So, this is an excellent news for our community and I really hope you bought within the last 12 months. If not, and if you still want to take the running fast train to real estate wealth, feel free to give me a call at 239-240-7346 or send me an email at info@1capecoral.com.

Here is the link to that Yahoo Real Estate article.

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Comments (0) Mar 13 2012

Want to buy a Cape Coral home in 2012? 5 Things To Do NOW

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If 2012 is your year for home hunting and purchase, here is a list of 5 things you should consider to do NOW before anything else.

  1. 1. Check your credit. And I’m serious about that. Make a copy of your credit report online and review anything that can show negative transaction. Call the credit bureau in charge and fix your problem. There is nothing worse than finding the perfect home at the perfect price, getting ready with the down payment and everything and learn that you have been denied because of your bad credit. So, if there is any problem there, fix it now.

  1. 2. Do your homework. Do you research online about 1 month before buying. Check the neighborhood, the market value, compare the foreclosure with the regular market, learn about short sale and see if it’s for you. Shop around for the best terms mortgage out there, call 4 or 5 mortgage broker and compare what they need and they fees/expenses. Ask them what documents you need to be qualified. Ask to be approved for a loan before even getting out to see properties. It’s frustrating to fall in love with a home that is price at $10,000 more than you can afford. Everything else will be disappointing at that point!

  1. 3. Fluff up your down payment. Make sure to have a full understanding of the money you have to bring at closing, all fees including. Again, it’s frustrating to be short of a couple of thousands dollars in front of the home of your dreams. Get your finance in place and ready to go.

  1. 4. Grow your cash. You’re gonna to move. So double check all that stuff that you didn’t use for the last 12 months or more. You won’t probably never use it ever. So make a big yard sale of that stuff, sell them on ebay or on craigslist and keep the money for your down payment or for some work you’ll need to do in your new home, like painting or new moldings.

  1. 5. Be prepared. If you want to purchase a great deal, like a foreclosure, be prepared. I wrote a guideline about being prepared to make an offer on a foreclosure: Cape Coral Foreclosure . I have come across a lot of excited people like kids in front of a toy getting frustrated with those above asking price multiple offers. So being psychologically prepared will help you to handle your purchase.


Once you have everything ready and you have prepared yourself for your 2012 home purchase, feel free to give me a call at 239-240-7346 and I’ll prepare some visits and will help you during your transaction to make it as smooth as possible.

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Comments (0) Dec 17 2011

Orchid Boulevard area Real Estate in Cape Coral

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I went for a walk in the Orchid Boulevard neighborhood today. It a pretty big area with about 270+ homes. I wanted to see the neighborhood myself since I sold a home there few months back. Well,  let me tell you that people there are extremely friendly. I was passing by and I shake a few hands from people enjoying their front patio or doing their lawn. They seems to help each others for little yard work or the check on each other properties.

Homes are a lot different there, from older ranch style properties sit on dry lot to huge Tuscan style mansion overlooking the beautiful Caloosahatchee river that sell for around $750,000. Also, and quiet rare these days, a couple of new homes being built there.

I had the chance to come across a burrowing owl’s nest in a front yard where the owl was standing proudly. Look at the shot I could take. They are beautiful and I’m happy I could be so close. She’s a beauty but difficult to see at first because of the colors matching the ground’s color in order to be as discreet as possible and unfortunately because my little camera I have at all time with me is not the best quality. But still a nice photo.

Cape Coral owl

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Comments (0) Nov 08 2011

Virtual Staging Software for Real Estate | Do it yourself

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I wrote an article about virtual staging for Real Estate few months back, using a virtual staging software. I was explaining the advantages of using a software to stage an empty home instead of renting furniture to stage it, which is more expensive.

Today, I did receive some updates from the company doing the software (Virtual Staging Solutions) and they have added a few more options that can greatly help to generate a very nice layout. The best use in my opinion is to vitually stage your empty listings, get the results on your website and let the buyer’s agents where to go to see how nice the property can be once furnished! It will bring a clear idea of the transition from a house to a home in your buyer’s eyes. It can be the difference between losing your time showing a property and an offer! Your vacant listings will sell faster.

The first new feature is the choice of furniture available. They said on their website that they were working for more than a year with designers in order to bring the brands of furniture available in stores! So you will be able to browse a furniture gallery.

Secondly, they have worked on a personalized way to have your documents out there. They have especially developed those pages for the mobile use. So, your virtual staging listings will be ready to be seen on all mobile devices out there, which is very convenient knowing that it’s easier to bring a cellphone or an iPad with you instead of a laptop.

And last but not least, your presentation of your virtual staging will be in video mode instead of just plain pictures. Today, the video is almost the next big thing.  People are leaving the world of blogging to enter the world of vlogging!

I had an email the other day, asking me questions about the virtual staging software. But honestly, since I’m not involved with this company, it’s probably better to ask directly to them. They website is www.virtualstagingsolutions.com . They have a help sections where your can find email address, phone number and a bunch of frequently asked questions. They offer several plans from $197, which is most likely much cheaper than renting furniture to furnished a living room, a family room and 2 or 3 bedrooms!

For more details, visit their website at www.virtualstagingsolutions.com and get your empty listings sold fast :-)

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Comments (0) Sep 17 2011

To be or not to be…a landlord? That’s the question.

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I read an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal yesterday about the renting market versus the owning market. While the scene is in California, this can be very similar here in SW Florida and especially in Cape Coral and Lehigh Acres.

Agustin Gutierrez, a construction worker from this town in the hills northeast of San Francisco Bay, lost his job in 2009, then, 10 months later, he lost ownership of his home.

Now, the husband and father of 4 rents the identical five-bedroom ranch from McKinley Capital Partners, an investment company that is at the forefront of a brand new breed of big-money landlords.
McKinley, which has acquired more than 300 foreclosed single-family houses in the Bay Area over the past two years, lately teamed up with Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC, a new York hedge fund, with plans to buy at least 500 more foreclosed houses in the subsequent year. Those homes, too, will probably be rented to people like the Gutierrez loved ones.

Acquiring foreclosed homes as investment properties has long been dominated by mom-and-pop investors. But now hedge funds, private-equity firms, pension funds and university endowments are dipping into that market place. The attraction is double-digit returns at a time when most bonds along with other income investments yield extremely small.

Essentially the most well-liked strategy is for a large investor to team up with a neighborhood organization that scouts out houses and finds the renters. The hope would be to flip the homes within the future when prices recover.

“It’s kind of the Wall Street meets Principal Street phenomenon,” says John Burns, an Irvine, Calif.-based real-estate consultant who has discussed investing in single-family rentals with hedge funds. “The Major Street guys need to have the capital, and Wall Street requirements the expertise.”

At the finish of May possibly, 3.five million loans had been at least 90 days delinquent or in foreclosure, based on investment bank Barclays Capital. In the very same time, the country’s house ownership rate has fallen, to 65.9% inside the second quarter of 2011 from its peak of 69.2% in 2004, based on figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau final month. That drop has produced millions of new renters and helped push the vacancy rate for rental housing down by about two percentage points, to 9.2%.

“The single-family rental market is truly very large,” said Dennis McGill, director of investigation at Zelman & Associates, a study firm that follows the housing market place. “The average American says, ‘If I’ve got two kids and a dog, I can’t live in a one-bedroom apartment.’”

Zelman lately issued a report saying that in Arizona, Florida and Nevada, states hard-hit by the foreclosure crisis, the number of families renting a single-family house increased 48% from 2005 to 2010.

Huge institutional investors could eventually help stabilize the marketplace by soaking up the huge overhang of foreclosures, which could allow housing to begin healing. However, the number of single-family houses being bought by institutional investors is still small compared to the millions of distressed properties. The biggest players in the industry are deploying hundreds of millions of dollars, not the billions necessary to make a major dent.

The federal government has a significant role as well. The Obama administration is currently considering ways of selling foreclosed houses to investors who agree to rent them out. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration own a lot more than half of all unsold foreclosed houses.

Being a landlord can be a costly hassle for significant investors. Unlike apartment complexes, which concentrate hundreds of rental units in one place, investors must obtain hundreds of single-family houses that are miles apart, each with separate maintenance problems. Tenants can be troublesome.

“You could have a bad tenant who doesn’t want to pay their rent, or maintain the pool,” says Guy Johnson, an investor who buys foreclosed properties in Nevada, Arizona and California and rents some of them out. “A hedge fund manager doesn’t want to have to be their own plumber or electrician.”

Purchasing foreclosed properties isn’t easy either. Investors sometimes have to pay thousands of dollars in “cash for keys” payments to the previous homeowners in order to entice them to leave the property, and foreclosed homeowners often damage their houses before they are evicted.

Private-equity giant Carlyle Group LLC tried its luck with the single-family property market two years ago but abandoned the strategy late last year after concluding that the returns weren’t big enough. Carlyle’s method was different. The organization formed partnerships with nearby asset managers in California that bought and flipped houses, rather than renting them.

For now, a lot more investors are plunging into the single-family rental marketplace. McKinley, the Oakland, Calif., business that owns Mr. Gutierrez’s house, has already begun to use Och-Ziff income to purchase houses. Its model would be to acquire houses at an average price of about $100,000 apiece, put between $10,000 and $25,000 in renovations into them, and set the rental rate of the house so that it produces a return of 8% to 12% annually. This often works out to a rent of roughly $1,200 per month.

McKinley and Och-Ziff could see additional returns from selling the houses at a higher price after a few years, once the market place has improved. “Two years ago no one thought you could scale this business or that it could be institutionalized,” stated Gregor Watson, a principal with McKinley. “Now, you can get extremely good yields. It’s a quite good long-term strategy.” He declined to comment on the Och-Ziff investment. Och-Ziff also declined to comment.

Other significant investors have formed rental-housing partnerships.

G8 Capital, a private-equity fund based in Ladera Ranch, Calif., has bought 3,000 houses across the country since 2008, mostly to flip them. It decided last year to begin pursuing a hold-and-rent technique. It has since bought 250 foreclosed houses as rentals. Carrington Property Services LLC, a Santa Ana, Calif.-based property investment business that manages about 4,500 houses nationally, is in talks with investors to raise funds for a real-estate investment trust, to be called Residential National Trust, which would acquire foreclosed houses for rental. The company plans to purchase as many as five,000 far more rental homes in markets including Chicago, Miami, Phoenix and Las Vegas.

Waypoint Genuine Estate Group, an Oakland, Calif.-based firm, has bought 700 houses within the past two years as rental properties. Doug Brien, a former place kicker for the New York Jets who is now managing director of Waypoint, says that his company has approached pension funds, university endowments and big private investment groups about investing in his fund. In July, he says he closed on a financing deal from an Ivy League university endowment, but declined to name the university.

“At some point, there is going to be a shortage of housing,” Mr. Brien mentioned. “Everyone is realizing that single-family buy-and-hold is the way to go.”

In November, hedge fund manager William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP released a report arguing that single-family rental properties are an “under-owned asset class” that would make “an intelligent investment for institutional investors.” Pershing Square predicted that investing in single-family houses and holding them as rentals for 10 years could produce double-digit investment returns, even if U.S. residence costs only improved marginally.

All the activity is fueling a renewed debate over whether investors are good or bad for the housing industry. In the early days of the housing bust, some community groups discouraged banks from selling foreclosed houses to investors for fear they wouldn’t take proper care of the properties. Some communities riddled with foreclosed houses became slums.

Alan Mallach, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution in Washington, argues that instead of running from investors, local governments should provide subsidies to investors who buy, rent out and are good landlords for foreclosed properties. “If a neighborhood has a high rate of residence ownership, that’s obviously better,” he stated. “But in some markets, there was so much inventory coming on the market place that the sheer number of properties was destabilizing those markets.”

Mr. Gutierrez, the Vallejo construction worker, now pays $1,800 a month in rent, compared to the $2,500 per month he was paying to cover the cost of his mortgage when he owned the house. He says it bothers him that he no longer owns his property, but is happy to pay less and says his new landlords are good property managers.

He bought the house in 2003 for $340,000 using a $322,700 loan. He refinanced the house 5 times, driving up the total amount of debt on the house to $400,000. He lost the house to foreclosure in 2009. McKinley paid about $155,000 for the house that year.

“It’s confusing, because sometimes I think it’s my house, but I have to remind myself that it’s not,” mentioned Mr. Gutierrez, who says he doesn’t plan to try to repurchase the house. “It’s sad, but it’s what happened to a lot of men and women.”

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Comments (0) Aug 06 2011

New Night Club in Cape Coral

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An additional hot spot will soon occupy the South Cape Entertainment district when the Dixie Roadhouse opens its doors in late August.

Because the closing of the Hired Hand Saloon far more than 13 years ago, numerous have anxiously awaited for the county scene to come back to Cape Coral.

Opening its doors on August 26, the Dixie Roadhouse will probably be a 10,000 square foot country and western nightclub located inside the heart of the city’s entertainment district. Coincidentally occupying exactly the same address as the Hired Hand Saloon as soon as did, the club can hold as much as 900 folks and promises to be new and distinctive option at the same time as a reason to get up off the couch and hit Cape Coral’s budding nightlife scene, “This will likely be one thing different than other clubs and restaurants. This is an actual nightclub,” says Dixie Roadhouse co-owner Lynn Pippinger.

The nightclub will probably be open its doors Wednesday via Saturday beginning at 5pm.

Looking to attract all ages, the club will offer line dance lessons nightly beginning at 7pm. At 10pm, music to pack the dance floors will start and play via the rest of the night, “The earlier entertainment and line dancing lessons will attract the older crowd. Once 10pm hits, the music shifts mixing country with classic rock, dance, retro and Best 40. That is when the younger crowd will come in and hit the dance floor,” says club co-owner David Townsend.

Whilst this may be the first club Townsend has opened in Cape Coral, he can be a veteran with the night club scene, having owned approximately a dozen clubs nationwide. He and Lynn also currently own Saddle Up in Chicago.
Cape Coral Nightclub
Townsend and Pippenger said they researched close to 200 properties across the nation when they decided to open up yet another club. Following narrowing their choices down to 25 properties, the duo hit the road and began visiting various places and buildings. When they drove into Southwest Florida, they knew they were on to one thing, “We came here and saw a marketplace with over 700,000 individuals, 3 country stations and no country nightclub,” mentioned Townsend.

The developing that Townsend and Pippinger had their eye on was the developing situated on SE 47th Terrace and SE 11th Place. The building was once the property of the Hired Hand Saloon and later the Bamboo Club, “We have really been seeking at the creating for the last year plus a half. It was built for a country and western nightclub. It had the bars in the precise locations we would have put them. Every thing was pretty significantly here. It’s far less costly to remodel than to construct. It was a ideal fit,” says Townsend.

Even though the creating may have as soon as been a country night club, do not anticipate the familiar appear that when was. The club is currently undergoing major renovations that consist of expanding the two,500 square foot dance floor, adding an additional bar, producing 3 bars total, two enormous fans over the dance floor and a new lighting system, at the same time as much much more.

Together with the new look, Townsend says they are also making innovative ways to make certain everybody will have an excellent time at a moderate cost. Drink costs, he says will probably be on par with other clubs and there is going to be methods to make the most of the $5 cover charge to obtain inside the doors. The club will supply poker chips with a $1 value to several of its customers. For example, if you come towards the club among 5pm and 8pm, if you pay the $5 cover charge, you are going to obtain five $1 poker chips to utilize toward drinks in the club during your go to. An additional way is if you want to reserve a table for the night, you pay the $100 fee for reservation and you are going to obtain 100 $1 poker chips to utilize toward drinks.

The club will also begin highlighting drink specials and hope to attract national music acts for particular events.

Townsend also says he considers the August opening phase one. He hopes to launch phase two within the next couple of months that can, l if all goes in accordance with program, a brand new deck on the back with the club, a patio on the front and utilize the roof best location with the constructing for patrons. He also hopes to hold a “Battle of the Bands” for local bands using the grand prize getting the chance to attend and play live in the Country Music Awards held later this year.

The club opening has also positively impacted the job marketplace, as it plans to hire roughly 60 local residents to function at the club with positions ranging from security, to bar staff, to advertising and marketing and much more.

Excitement for the club opening has raced across the city with the club’s Facebook page already garnering over 1,500 fans, “People are so excited we’re coming. We can’t wait to jump in and open the doors. It’s going to be exciting,” says Pippenger.

The club will open its doors August 26 and then have their grand opening September 25. To discover far more information concerning employment in the club you can pay a visit to their Facebook page where they also have VIP passes available for download.

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Comments (0) Jul 29 2011

Cape Coral Realtor for a cause

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I use to prospect by knocking on doors or distributing fliers. That gives me some phone calls and leads.
One of them was from a young couple with 2 kids. She called me to pass by and discuss what I can do in order to list and sell her home.

I stopped by and was in front of a nice and cozy wood frame house with a big basement that includes a 2 car garage.
At the dining room table, she explained that her husband and her were behind payment, that they needed to sell yesterday.
But the market was slow. I immediately understood that it will be a tricky listing. That couple was in trouble and needed to get the home sold as soon as possible. They knew that with the market, it will be difficult.
I took the listing. We signed the paper works and I said I’ll get in touch on a weekly basis.
They had their small electric company. Her husband was electrician and she took care of the paper work and customer care plus appointments and so on.
But the business was not good enough. And those financial distress made it even harder on their life as a couple.

After a couple of weeks, I had few showing, because we were agreed to list it at a below market value to make it faster.
But still, no offer on the table. So we were back on the dining room table again. I was bringing an idea for her.

It was what I sometimes offer to sellers as an investor: taking over the payments… and the house!
I explained how it works, what for her and what’s for me, how we can get this done smoothly and easily, how I could go around the bank, etc…

So, basically, the house worth $160K with an existing balance mortgage of about $140K.
I, of course, disclose everything I had too, the fact that I was an agent, that I could sell it with a profit later on, that she would walk away from the closing table with no money and no house. She agreed.
I paid the due payments and did a quit claim. I just had a house for the few thousands late payments.
She was relieved. She called me several times telling how glad she was, that now, she sleep much better even if she was going through her divorce, the situation had killed her marriage.
She was starting over. From her father’s garage converted in a room for her and her 2 young children, she was studying to become a nurse. It was a 2 years thing. 2 years that I enjoy the house for myself.
She didn’t call me after those 2 years, I did. She was working as a nurse, a high demand position. She was re-building her life, her credit and I was making her payment, keeping her credit score as intact as possible. She was very courageous.

I had an offer for her: to get her home back. For free. She got me the back payments I paid for her and we did a quit claim again.
She was back in her home with her 2 children. She had the little improvements I did in the house. Few walls in the basement, hardwood flooring and fresh painting.

It’s been a great feeling to be able to help someone in one of the most difficult time of her life. And very rewarding.
Of course I had a call from the bank, but we agree that a check from an unknown person is better than no check at all.
I passed by time to time, but without disturbing. A little kitten has been included to the family and the small cherry tree I planted in the yard has become stronger, battling hard weather. Life goes on. I think I was making her a favor but when I decided to quit claim it back to her, she really made my day thinking all she went through and all she became.

To be a Realtor is a true privilege. We got most of the times more than decent check for most of the times less hard work than some people. We need to realize that and never take it for granted. Look around and ask yourself: “how can I help someone today, for free?”
You may get the highest pay check ever: satisfaction of a job well done.

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Comments (0) Feb 06 2011

Foreclosures in Cape Coral, Florida : Get ready before to buy !

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Today I break two records since I have my Real Estate license, about 10 years ago now.

The first one is I made, so far, more offers than days in the month. We are Nov 18 and I made 19 offers so far.

The second one, and most important for me, the last offer passed the limit of the 10% higher than asking price. Last year, offers were about 2% to 5% below asking price for those foreclosures in Cape Coral. Last spring, they were about on the asking price. Since last summer, buyers had to go higher than asking price for any Cape Coral foreclosure. November and I had an offer at $301,000 for an asking price of $272,900

Now, what’s amazing is my client has been outbid! Someone offered an even higher price for a foreclosure. That’s a very good sign. We were in a buyer’s market and we are entering a very strong seller’s market.

Of course, everything is not lost. My clients are cash buyers and very motivated to buy. So tomorrow will be another offer for them. I’ll have to suggest to pass the 10% above asking bar though, but they know that already :-)

I often have newer buyers calling me about foreclosures in Cape Coral. When I explain that an offer at asking price or below is just not enough, some of them are a bit sceptical. Some believe I’m bluffing to get more commission, other will try another agent, just to hear what they want to hear. The remaining buyers will try several times below asking until frustration appears. Then, they will remember what I said and will try full asking price offers. Most of the time, if not every time, they will be outbid. Usually, the number of offers at asking price is lower than the previous offers at below asking price. They seems to understand faster. That’s when they hit the third level, and honestly, they can be frustrated as well.

  • - If you are interested to enter the Cape Coral foreclosure jungle these days, be prepared.
  • - If you need a loan, you are already in trouble but it’s not necessarily an impossible mission. Just get you loan paper works ready and handy. Your best chance will be to make an offer the very first day. However, you have 50% chance to be outbid by an all cash offer!
  • - If you try asking price or below, 99% chance you’ll be outbid. Don’t waste your time and start above asking price right away.
  • - If you are a cash buyer, make sure to have your solid proof of funds with you, in your pocket, ready to get it at anytime.


The prices of the foreclosures in Cape Coral, Florida, are increasing, little by little. The demand is there and starving for “good deals”. The best time to buy a foreclosure in Cape Coral was last year and winter-spring 2010. The market is rebounding and for those who didn’t catch the train will regret soon or later.

UPDATE:

Today is March 29, 2011 and I wanted to give some updates.
Last November, when I wrote this article, there were more than 1,000 foreclosures in Lee County. Today, there are only 389! That’s mean we are going forward the end of the foreclosure crisis. And, banks realize that they can get more money now for their properties. The good prices we saw in 2010 are not there in 2011. I hope you bought your foreclosures last year.

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Comments (1) Nov 19 2010

Heavy drop of foreclosure in Cape Coral, Florida

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I saw the big title in the newspaper today. There had been 656 foreclosure lawsuits filed in Lee County in October, the lowest range in a lot more than three years, according to statistics released Monday by the South West Florida Real Estate Investment Association.

It was a rare ray of hope in a grim situation: The Lee County and Cape Coral  foreclosure rate is normally within the top five metropolitan areas nationwide, with only Las Vegas consistently worse.

October’s variety is down 31 % from September’s 953. Yes, you read me: 31% less than the month before. The pace hasn’t been this slow since quite a long time.  555 had been filed in February 2007 as the wave of mortgage failures that followed the housing boom was just obtaining under way.

Experts stated that the decline likely was part of a long-term downward pattern — but that’s not all.

Foreclosures possibly plunged at least in aspect since for the past month, some banks have been holding off on foreclosures whilst they sort out issues including who truly owns the note and whether attorneys basically read all the paperwork, but the holding was only for 1 week and from 2 banks, including a major one though: Bank of America.

But the recent lender troubles alone couldn’t have caused a drop as sharp as October’s. Bankers “did knock some things out, but in the totality with the trend, no. 10 to 20 percent of your mortgages might be affected,” but not enough to account for the whole drop.

County Clerk of Court Charlie Green said that whatever the trigger, the downward pattern has helped whittle away at a daunting backlog of foreclosures within the court system: Public auctions disposing of properties are now outnumbering new filings.

Only about 14,700 cases are from the pipeline now, Green mentioned, down practically half from the 26,000 when the difficulty peaked at the end of 2008.

Still, he cautioned that there’s a substantial “shadow inventory” of houses that banks are selecting not to foreclose on. “I believe we’re clearing some out, but the banks are holding back.”

But we don’t really know how many far more. Next month will give us a better indication as to whether or not it was a normal trend or lenders stopping until they figure out what the issue with their process was.”

Also the pace of foreclosure doesn’t occur in a vacuum: if the winter tourist season is strong, it will reduce unemployment and keep far more people financially able to keep their homes, which is the case in South West Flroida, which include Cape Coral.

I think it will be only in April, May, June of next year that we’ll see how this season’s sales and the economic effect of your season influenced foreclosures.

A big builder in Cape Coral, stated that whatever the short-term pattern, foreclosures can’t sustain themselves at that pace. It’s going to sooner or later start slowing up. And I think it is happening right now.

Also, the issues with the foreclosure process have made some prospective buyers skittish about buying a previously mortgaged house.

However, while I find it easier to sell to prospective renters a house where owners are living in than a foreclosure, that  non distresses market has a hard time to compete with the foreclosures. Plus, new potential buyers have still a hard time to accept the fact that most of the time, there is a multiple offer situation on every foreclosed properties, ending by an accepted offer above the asking price. Often, those buyers go through a 3 step buying process. The first is the below asking price period where the buyer experience the frustration of being outbid. Then there is the full price offers period of time, which is usually shorter than the first one. Most of the time, the buyers learned their lessons and go the third period, the above asking price offers moment where they finally get a property under contract.

It’s now even more difficult with the decrease of the number of foreclosure and with a possible increase of pricing, even for foreclosures.

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Comments (0) Nov 02 2010

The new VA hospital is attracting businesses

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The City of Cape Coral is unveiling an ambitious marketing strategy, aimed at attracting sustainable business towards the North Cape. The Economic Development Workplace is creating a “Veteran’s Investment Zone” to assist create a business complex around the new VA hospital.

The new VA Outpatient Clinic – currently under construction within the North Cape – is expected to attract hundreds of thousands of veterans. And developers are wanting at methods to profit from the VA’s enterprise.

“We have a important developer seeking at a piece of land to your west of your VA website for workplace and medical parks,” explained Christy Vogt, with the Cape Coral Financial Growth Office.

She says the city’s Financial Advancement Workplace sees the VA clinic as a major opportunity to market the north part of your Cape attractive to corporations.

The EDO has currently coined the area, the Veteran’s Investment Zone – or VIZ.

“We are seeing a great deal of activity there, inquiry from land owners and developers,” Vogt explained.

VIZ borders Diplomat Parkway, Littleton Road and NE 24th Avenue.

According on the Cape Coral Chamber of Commerce, the EDO has already received interest from one business searching to create a hotel near the property.

“There’s a good deal of interest into trying to take the crumbs that fall from the activity that occurs at the clinic,” mentioned Mike Quaintance, of the Cape Coral Chamber.

The Chamber has been providing interested developers with info on area demographics and accessible workforce.

And while it is too soon to tell if the VIZ will succeed, Quaintance says the plan has potential.

“It’s going to create some synergy to draw some organizations which are going to be complimentary on the VA Clinic,” he mentioned.

The EDO plans to hold a public forum in November.

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