From atop any gleaming, half-sold
condo project, South Florida's housing market looks bleak.
Viewed from abroad, it looks brighter.
Just like everyone
else, foreigners turned away from Florida's housing market as
the downturn took hold. Now,
international shoppers from Europe and Latin America to Canada and South
Africa are again scoping out bargains, agents say.
So far, most
shoppers are just looking, and high property taxes and
maintenance fees and the tightening mortgage market are a
deterrent. But the outsiders see opportunity: The U.S. dollar
has slid to record lows against the euro and some other
currencies, home prices are falling, and the selection
is huge and getting bigger. And the region remains a safe
haven for sheltering wealth from tyrants and turmoil.
''The most willing
money, the most ready to deploy,
is from offshore,'' says Philip Spiegelman, a principal in International Sales
Group, an Aventura condo sales and marketing firm.
A recovery in
Florida's housing market hinges, of course, on a broader
rebound in U.S. housing and the resolution of the credit
crisis triggered by mortgage woes. Still, foreigners
-- long a mainstay of South Florida's real-estate picture -- will
play a major role in the market's future.
Florida, by far,
leads the U.S. market, accounting for an estimated 26 percent
of all foreign purchases for the year period that ended in
April 2007, the National Association of Realtors reports. Within the state,
Miami and Fort Lauderdale are the top markets.
''The market is very weak at the moment, and I'm feeling
good to buy,'' says Ryan Ramkisoensing, who has been prowling
the Web for Florida real-estate bargains from Holland ever
since completing six months of financial services work here.
He plans a shopping expedition to Miami, probably within six
months.
International buyers are scouting properties in the usual
haunts along Brickell Avenue and in Key Biscayne as well as
more recent internationally popular enclaves such as Doral and
Weston.
To court buyers, Condo Vultures Realty of Bal Harbour has
added international staff with language and cultural skills.
Principal Peter Zalewski says the firm is getting inquiries
from Dutch, Irish, French, German, British and Canadian
shoppers, among others. ''Everyone. Simply because of their
rich currency, they're coming here,'' he says.
GOING FAR AND
WIDE
Spiegelman's firm, ISG, has stepped up its focus on Europe
and Latin America and has agents trekking to India and
Russia.
Classes that coach agents in how to work with foreign
buyers are full, according to Richard Barkett, CEO of the
Realtors Association of Greater Fort Lauderdale.
Latin America's political shift to the left -- particularly
Venezuela -- has renewed the periodic surge of money stashed
into Florida real estate as a safe haven.
''We say Hugo Chávez is our best salesman,'' says Rose
Marie van Blommestein, an ISG sales director who speaks four
languages. Roughly a third of the units sold so far at the
28-story, 267-unit Ocean Marine Yacht Club in Hallandale Beach
have gone to international buyers, says van Blommestein, who
is Italian.
Venezuelan real-estate agent Roseangela Acosta is
considering buying several units in the building and proposing
a bulk sale to investors in Caracas. ''With the crazy
president we have, we live with one foot here and one foot in
Venezuela,'' Acosta says.
'UPPER
HAND'
Of course, potential buyers from abroad share domestic
trepidations about overpaying in a declining market. Agents
are seeing international clients shopping around until the
market hits bottom.
But with the euro at an all-time high against the dollar --
up 28 percent in two years -- Europeans realize it might be
time to pounce. ''They're playing the currency and also
playing the discount [on prices],'' says Zalewski, of Condo
Vultures. ``They really have the clear upper hand.''
Some are looking for a vacation home; others see an
investment opportunity.
''All of them are looking for bargains,'' says Michael
Schnabel, a Miami-based Realtor with Esslinger Wooten Maxwell
who has seen low-ball offers of 65 percent to 70 percent of
list prices. ``They're all aware of what's going on: a lot of
construction, a lot of supply.''
Most seem prepared to buy and hold. ''This is long-term.
They know it's not a flip situation,'' Schnabel says.
Danielle Aguiar, a French agent at RE/MAX Partners in
Plantation, says one French client is looking for foreclosures
and ''short sales'' -- deals in which a bank agrees to give up
its lien for less than the amount owed.
OBSTACLES
Despite the foreigners' strong appetite for a place in the
sun, Realtors see many hurdles to closing deals.
Sophie Mavroleon, a Realtor with Dynamic Realty Group in
Bal Harbour, markets $500,000 to $1.5 million properties to
Europeans, especially the French. She says she has watched
many potential sales evaporate over taxes and maintenance,
which have spiraled upward because of insurance costs.
''Foreign buyers will buy beautiful views on the ocean;
it's an easy sale -- until people realize how much taxes and
maintenance costs are,'' Mavroleon says.
Exorbitant property insurance costs in the wake of the
2004-05 hurricane seasons were a key reason foreigners
accounted for just 7.3 percent of Florida's home sales during
2006, down from 15 percent in the year period that ended in
May 2005, according to the National Association of
Realtors.
THE TAX
BURDEN
Also off-putting is the two-tier nature of Florida property
taxes. Only U.S. citizens and those with green cards are
eligible for Florida homestead status and the Save Our Homes
cap that limits assessment increases to 3 percent a year. Many
foreign buyers can't deduct property taxes from income taxes
back home.
''The tax situation is a huge issue with our members,''
says Michael Mackenzie, a spokesman for the Canadian Snowbird
Association. Canadians, he says, are now looking to
alternative sunny spots. ``Arizona is stepping up its
marketing.''
VISA ISSUES
Another hurdle for foreigners is the tough U.S. stance on
granting admission to the country. ''Were it not for the
challenges to foreigners getting a visa, we'd be selling a lot
more,'' says Alicia Cervera Lamadrid, CEO of Miami's Related
Cervera Realty, which handles sales for condo projects. ``For
Russia, it's a huge problem.
``We're exploring helping people with visa information. We
can do a little research, help them find a lawyer.''
Banks, meanwhile, ''are making it more complicated and more
difficult for foreign nationals to obtain loans,'' says Tony
Acquaviva. He owns U.S. Mortgage of Florida in Boca Raton,
which is seeing many South Africans, Brits, and other
Europeans interested in the region.
BANK
RESTRICTIONS
Though foreigners are more likely than Americans to pay
cash for U.S. homes, an estimated 69 percent rely on
mortgages, the NAR says.
Banks limit the nationalities they will lend to, some
generally avoiding Venezuelans because of perceived political
instability, Acquaviva says. Banks have stiffened
documentation requirements and are requiring bigger down
payments, especially for foreign buyers, Acquaviva adds.
''Banks are saying they're not sure what values are
anymore, and instead of a loan-to-value of 80 percent, they'll
do maybe 60 percent or 65 percent,'' says ISG principal
Spiegelman. ``Offshore buyers felt 20 percent upfront should
be sufficient, and now this is causing a whole new level of
difficulty.''