Freedom Tower gets back Weather Vane

The Freedom Tower had returned to it today one of it’s most distinguishing features after months of being refurbished.

Miami Dade Community College (the Freedom Towers current owner) continues pressing forward with maintaining and refurbishing one of Miami’s most iconic and important landmarks.

The newly placed weather vane returns a unique feature to one of the cities local treasures.



Here is a little bit of intriguing code from Zillow.com

It’s a chart that tracks consumer consensus on when they think the market will hit bottom in Real Estate.

Check it out!

Then Check out our zillow profile!



Miami Real Estate Market Trends

Thought you might want to see some graphs or timeline of the current market as seen through the eyes of our partner Zillow.com

Check out the graph and hit up the link to review other market data related to Miami.

The graphs can be temperamental in loading but are pretty cool.

Cheers!

Zillow Home Value Index


EMH3.com is a LuxuryHomes.com exclusive affiliate member for Miami and Key Biscayne Florida.

LuxuryHomes.com is one of the worlds leading websites for showcasing top real estate agents and the finest properties from around the world. EMH3.com offers this incredible marketing tool and exclusive service to its clients and is one of the many tools EMH3.com uses to promote your property to the top of the class.

“We are very happy to extend this service to our clients and look forward a long fruitful relationship” as quoted by our Managing Partner who negotiated this arrangement.

Check out the links below that take you the respective search results showing our top positions in both markets!

Below is our exclusive placement in the Key Biscayne Market.

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This is our top placement for the Miami market for the exclusive Miami Page.

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When you want comprehensive market coverage and the best in class real estate service, look no further than EMH3.com



We’re a Favorite Place on Google Maps!

Our Broker and Managing Partner of EMH3.com, Sieckel LLC and NDPS just received a Favorite Place designation on Google Maps for being one of the most popular places to click on within our market for real estate!

Congrats to Adrian and we are excited for a new year with a lot of activity!

From the EMH3 Team.

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Take your property search mobile with this great new Iphone App (Android and Blackberry coming soon)!

2321

It’s always great to be able to go online from the comfort of your home and search for real estate through your local MLS (Multiple Listing Service). Almost 80% of all real estate searches start online. But a lot of people don’t want to search from the confines of their living room or home office. Some of us…. Actually, a lot of us, like to take our home search on the road. You know, kick the tires, see if that dream home is really a dream or if that community you have always liked is so idyllic when paying it a closer visit.

Now, you can do both. At the same time no less! Hit the road with our new Iphone real estate app and search for properties to your hearts content. Pick you area on the map, set your price points and number of rooms. Click refresh on the map once you have set your parameters and… Voila! Listings with all the pertinent data, images, etc… in the palm of your hand. The best part is our contact info is built into the App! No more wondering who to call or email when wanting to set up a time or when making an offer on a property.

Blackberry and Android phone users should not fret. You are not being left out of the party. Customized property search Apps for your phones are coming soon.

In the meantime, hit the image above that will take you to the MAC app store to download this super cool, FREE piece of software. Enter the code above (2321) once the app is on your phone to activate and happy house hunting!

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Florida’s existing home and condo sales year to year benchmark was up in September for the first time in 13 months.

What a great title! Here is the better news for homebuyers. Florida’s median home (Single family homes) price last month was $142,00 compared to the national average of $177,500 making Florida not just a great place to live but a relative bargain and 19% cheaper than this time last year!

Beside the better numbers there were some other things of important note. Foreclosure activity and Short Sales (Distressed properties) were still pushing prices downward or to use the National Association of Realtors term “distorting values”. As much as we would all love to put on our rose colored glasses and argue that short sales and foreclosures are not legitimate transactions (But distortions) upon which to value property; the fact remains they constitute the bulk of activity in key markets and beside being a great opportunity to buy are also REALITY. But I digress….

Other good news is that condo’s are faring better as well. Almost twice the amount of condo sales took place (5088 units sold statewide versus 2870) in September. Couple that with the fact that the states median condo price is $102,500 versus $179,300 for the national average and the picture is becoming increasingly clear that the time is nigh to buy!

Specific, harder hit markets values will vary but the overall picture is looking better for us in the Sunshine State.

So, prices are down to incredibly low, lows. Transactions are up and interest rates on a 30 year fixed are hovering around the 5% mark. And you are waiting because….?

Florida Homes Sales up year to year



First Time Homebuyer Tax Credit Video

…It’s official! The Homebuyer Tax Credit is going to be sticking around for a while and is essentially as we reported in our earlier posts. Read Below for the main points and catch the video above for a great intro to how it works. Then……. Call us! This bill basically flew through the House and Senate and may be signed as early as tomorrow!

Back in February, the economic stimulus package known as the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009” was signed into law by President Obama. The Act includes provisions intended to revitalize the housing market, while the U.S. Treasury Department’s plan simultaneously helps mitigate foreclosures and encourages new lending in their tandem effort to bring about a housing recovery.

The video is actually cute but also straightforward in it’s message.

EMH3 has the tools needed to help potential homebuyers and sellers benefit from these new programs.

Right now though time is running out! The Tax credit Ends April 30 2010.

Here is a link with some additional details of the homebuyer tax credit.

Click HERE

This just In!

There is a very strong possibility the tax credit may will get extended out to April of next year AND people looking to upgrade their homes will ALSO get a tax credit for doing so.

So, here is skinny on the deal. The $8k credit for first time homebuyers keeps rolling with the following rules. Adjusted gross income of less than $125k for single filers or $225 for couples filing jointly. Also, the credit would only apply to homes for 800k or less (that would mean almost all of us can get in on this :-) ..). Something new is the ability to earn a credit of up to $6500 dollars for those looking to trade up to a bigger primary residence and who have already lived in their home for 5 of the past 8 years. That means you folks who held out during all this madness can now come play musical houses with the rest of us!

This is good news in that this second measure opens up another big portion of what has historically been an important part of the real estate market. The relocation gang! Better known as those folks who moved from a house to an apartment and vice-versa locally or those who took the plunge and decided to come down to Florida and avoid those “lovely” North East winters…

Hit the image below for the read link to the CNN article. And…. don’t forget. When you move to Florida, call us!

Home Buyer Tax Credit Extension



Real Estate Short Sales the long and not so short of it.

But they are not impossible either. Just annoying to all involved.

It should be said that we do short sales as a company and hold  a CDPE designation (Certified Distressed Property Experts). We do not shy away from them but the incredible reaction to this type of transaction is somewhat surprising considering that they have been around for decades. What follows is a short history of what got us here in the real estate market and the general feelings of frustration that abound. In the end we are big believers of the following. Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% your attitude. Short sales are just that. An attitude adjustment.

In the ever changing landscape of real estate transactions there has emerged the new standard of real estate sale. The Short Sale followed closely by it’s brother-in-arms known as the bank foreclosure or REO sale. By definition a short sale is a circumstance where the value of a home has fallen below it’s current loan value. This is a known situation by most people nowadays. What is not so clear or understood is how these transactions make it from listing to closing? Owners and realtors alike tend to marvel at both the aptitude and general ineptitude of it all. But there are reasons for these things! Not necessarily reasons to give you comfort but reasons none the less.

What follows is a quick history of what got us here  and a random walk through a typical short sale. The idea is not to drown anyone in the minutiae and the subtle differences between a regular real estate sale versus a short sale but rather to hit the major points between regular and short sales. Having this in hand will give color to the nuances that make up the verbal and written discourse of these transactions both for those in the business and to those whose homes are in such a situation.

Your mileage will (like anything) vary as each situation is unique but they share some basic traits.

Here are some scenarios:

So, today you decide for any one of a number of reasons that it is time to sell your home. If you are one of the fortunate who has no debt on their real estate you find a realtor you trust who understands your goals and your market. Together, you do an analysis of the market and find that in most cases you are taking a serious hit to value. Especially if you bought within the last 3-5 years in say, Miami, Vegas or any other major market growing it’s urban core. Outside of this time frame and within certain markets you might find you have flat equity value versus negative equity value (no debt but worth less than what you paid for). Again, real estate is very local in nature so differences will abound.

Now, for the rest of us (the vast majority actually), being debt free on what is typically our biggest purchase is something lovingly contemplated when nearing retirement age and a distant thought for the 30 and 40 something crowd. For the rest of us we have fluctuating mortgages, credit card debt, school loans, 401k’s, car payments, shaky jobs and no where near the savings we would like in times of need. Hold on though just one minute! Think back for a minute… While in the heyday of the real estate boom everyone banked on the notion of perpetual equity increases in real estate value and the ability to constantly trade these real estate assets to others having the very same expectation of increase and return but lacking one key element. Nobody was living in these great places?! Another interesting thing happened as well. The stock market got involved and started getting really creative with the creation of new capital to feed this frenzy even further known as derivates but that is a conversation for another day. The SEC blinked, sneezed and kept a business as usual stance only glancing occasionally at these new fangled financial instruments.

The inevitable bubble burst and with it came the blame, anger, shame and general disgust that began to be hurtled in all directions with a keen emphasis on banks and financial institutions. You know them all too well. Those big, easy, slow moving, cash bloated targets of hate. Then came the appraisers, mortgage brokers, politicians, regulators and those greedy developers producing all these units in the first place. But we are forgetting one key player in all of this. Without this one group all the others would simply be looking for another product to pitch. Can you guess? …No?

All of us! As in you, me (well, actually I sat this one out on the sidelines from day one) and just about everyone else in the current real estate market. We collectively lost our aggregated marbles… Without us none of this would be possible. We gave credence and validity to the creation of this new wealth and now suffer along with everyone else in it’s lower valuation and lost dream of immediate leaps of increasing equity.

We all watched how regulators from both the prior and present administrations have grappled with and tinkered with the money supply, TARP, first time homebuyer credits, cash for clunkers and anything else to get our beloved market economy moving again. Thankfully there are signs of life and as a nation we will survive and hopefully be the wiser after our little romp in Tulipville.

We have even had sacrificial lambs. Lehman brothers took a hit and the death march commenced from there swallowing up any financial institution whose fed induced stress test came out, shall we say… stressful to those relying on it?

Having gone through our short history of financial calamity the question remains. Why do real estate short sales take so long? Why do owners, buyers, realtors, appraisers and lenders end up frustrated? We all collectively hate to deal with real estate short sales and their reputation is simply not good. The answer though, is relatively simple.

Too Many Cooks In The Kitchen

When you sell your house in what was once a normal transaction there were only a handful of persons in the decision making process. The Buyer and The Seller. Sure, there were appraisers, lenders, inspections and a host of other things that could adversely effect a transaction but that was the whole idea behind “right to inspect” and rescission periods. To give a set time to iron these things out and decide on whether or not the real estate transaction could be done.

Today it’a whole new ballgame! A short sale has the property owner and the holder of the mortgage becoming strange bedfellows in the sale process. Statutes designed to manage the transaction process started being circumvented by the new decision making structure invoked by selling for less than mortgage value. Timelines became increasingly more opaque as it became clearer that what drives a homeowner to sell is not what drives a bank to sell the very same asset.  Granted the result is the same for both. The bank takes a hit to it’s bottom line and has to account for a loss in it’s books. We as individuals take the financial hit and the hit to our credit worthiness and family stability. Nobody wins but we lick our wounds, get back up and rebuild.

Think of it this way. Imagine each individual were to partake in a Fed sponsored financial stress test of their personal lives with the resulting outcome that they may be bought out or put on sale should their score not be stellar. That is a bit of a strange way to look at it but therein lies the rub. You are only one person on the auction block. Banks taking a hit to their bottom line risk disrupting their entire structural ecosystem should they be put on the chopping block. There is a certain ironic twist to this in that I can imagine more than one person out their saying “Hey, I can be bought out! If it clears my debt and get’s me a clean slate without a hit to my credit like a seized bank, sure!” But banks shed people in these scenarios. I am not sure what an individual would shed in the same circumstance…

But banks like people hang on! Stubbornly clinging to that last vestige of hope. Hope in the case of the banks is time.

What do I Mean. If a bank forecloses they are on the hook for potential association fees, property taxes and other potential costs that are normally the responsibility of the homeowner. The servicing entities that manage these portfolio of loans the bank holds typically are not staffed for what has been an onslaught of non-payment activity and do not have the cost structure nor the desire to create staff around money losing propositions. The court house auction process does not recoup anywhere near the funds it used to as both the auctions and the courts are flooded and many properties remain within the banks portfolio effectively abandoned because of the servicer gap.

A short sale effectively is a bandaid on a bullet hole temporarily stanching or holding back what will be the inevitable credit worthiness hit to the individual and banking institutions books. The good news for banks is that they don’t need to worry about home owners association fees (unless the association forecloses which, in Florida they can and DO do.) or taxes for at least a little while. As said, in this circumstance the loan is not written off just yet and is negotiated between owner and lender. This negotiation has become a cottage industry in and of itself and is a shame as there are many programs to help homeowners in a jam that are free!

So, the owner and the bank agree on a market price to have the property listed for sale and marketed. It goes on the market  and offers come in. The owner now has taken on a partner that in many cases has substantially different goals than a normal person in a transaction.

Multiple offers on a single property become the rule. The name of the person in charge on behalf of the bank changes often and without notice making any form of  consistency difficult at best. Financing to purchase is not considered a part of a good offer and cash deals are (unless the entity holding the short sale debt can refinance with the new buyer). The appraisal process has become onerous with the application of new HVCC rules governing the terms of communication between lenders, appraisers, owner and realtor and the use of timelines that are not conducive to good appraising. Realtor commissions and documents that are used for these transactions change regularly and continue to be under scrutiny due to the enigmatic nature of real estate today.

Effectively, Owners want to sell their real estate and move on. Take the hit to their credit and rebuild. Banks want to hold on and don’t have the infrastructure nor the servicing agents to handle the short sale and foreclosure volume hitting them in the hopes of riding things out.

Result. Knee-jerk reactions abound and nothing gets done except by sheer force of will, specific knowledge and some good ole luck!

There is a silver lining.

Many markets have adjusted their rental policies, HUD homes are more plentiful, Workforce housing is seeing some potential housing opportunities and regulators and politicians are starting to address the obvious disparities that exist in the real estate short sale process.



Liquidity Bottleneck

HVCC rules, Appraisal and Lending practices in Real Estate

Save the date! Sept 8 at the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce at the newly renovated Omni Mall.

In this third installment of the series we will have Pedro J. Garcia who is the Property Appraiser for Miami-Dade County give perspective on the counties role and function on property value and what to expect at the municipal level. Mitchel Mestel who is a state certified Residential Real Estate Appraiser will shed light on the current appraisal climate and discuss how the industry has changed and where it is headed. Ana Cruz-Taura from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta will give insight into the regulatory aspects of the banking industry and the steps the FED is currently taking. Todd Wheeler from the Home Financing Center will be on hand to discuss how current real estate buyers can be assisted taking into account the new HVCC rules, Appraisal standards and regulatory guidelines.

The event is Sponsored by Great Florida Bank and our parent company Sieckel LLC.

Hit the image below for the full invite and click here to go to the Chamber of Commerce Page to take part. Please hurry as these events tend to fill up quickly.

Liquidity Bottleneck



Underwater 101 Current Real Estate MarketReal Estate Video Blogs

Our parent companies managing director hosted and moderated a discussion of real estate lending, foreclosure and loan modification programs for persons interested in knowing more to assist themselves and for professionals in the field to expand their tool kit.

Below is a brief description of the overall program and brief notes on the panelists and moderator. What follows will be the videos in chronological order

Description: The Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce held a workshop on Navigating the Housing Market on July 28, 2009 Foreclosures. Shortsales. Loan Modifications. What is the Impact? Learn about the recent local, state and federal programs such as the 11th Circuit Homestead Access to Mediation Program (CHMP) and Making Homes Affordable established to assist homeowners in their efforts to resolve the escalating real estate problems as well as what options and programs are available and their future implications. Speakers included: Judge Jennifer D. Bailey, Administrative Judge, Civil Division 11th Judicial Circuit Miami-Dade County Courthouse Ned Pope Director, Mortgage Foreclosure Mediation Program The Collins Center for Public Policy Arden Shank Executive Director & President Neighborhood Housing Services Ed Wilburn Managing Director Great Florida Bank Moderator – Adrian Diaz-Sieckel Managing Director, Broker, LCam for Sieckel LLC

In this first segment are introduced the panelists giving each member five minutes to tell us about what they in specific do and how it relates to the current lending and foreclosure crisis being faced in Miami-Dade County. The first panelist to speak is Judge Bailey.

In this second segment Arden Shank discusses his program and some of the issues that he faces when dealing with lenders and persons seeking loan modifications.

In this third segment Ed Wilburn from Great Florida Bank discusses mortgage lending and the current lending crisis offering both insight and perspective on the issues being faced by current borrowers.

The fourth segment covers Ned Pope and The Collins centers effort in mediation of the current lending crisis through the 11th judicial circuit.

In this fifth segment we get down to asking questions regarding absorption of the current foreclosure docket, ideal scenarios to clear it and manage it, costs to use mediation and counseling services and a few others.

Sixth segment and questions keep coming. First question is answered by Ed Wilburn discussing his banks perspective on the relationship between mortgage brokers and banks and the fallout rate for prospective persons looking for money to purchase a home. Discussion continues on how the face of defaulting owners has changed and the issue of promissory notes.

In this last segment we continue taking audience questions (unfortunately we ran out of time!) covering issues that cause case delays, sale dates, etc.



Underwater 101

New Update. The PBS recordings are done and we will be posting these to our site shortly.

(Update)! Today’s underwater 101 Financial Solutions program is being recorded by PBS and will be posted on their community information blog later today. As soon as we can we will post the link.

EMH3′s parent company Sieckel LLC is proud to be sponsoring the series and moderating this event.

Underwater 101 is the second in an ongoing series of what originally got its start as a breakfast get together at the Miami Chamber of Commerce. The goal of the series is to discuss the issues, opportunities and circumstances relative to the lending freeze on both commercial and residential real estate assets and the subsequent loan defaults that have and are still occurring.

In this event learn about the “CHAMP” program (Circuit Homestead Access to Mediation Program) and “Making Homes Affordable”. Both programs assist homeowners in their efforts to avoid foreclosure (through targeted mediation and other programs) and also local, regional and federally funded programs that exist and how they apply to you.

This event is open to all persons and not just real estate professionals, attorneys and bankers.

The panelists represent that part of the judicial branch that handles foreclosure cases and discusses the steps they are taking to manage the incredible increase in filings. Also, you have the head of Neighborhood Housing Services to discuss other types of community lending opportunities as well as Great Florida Bank to give a perspective from a solvent and solid local lender in our community.

Our own head of real estate will moderate while also lending his perspective to the event.

It will be very informative so don’t miss it!

Click on the image below to be taken to the Miami Chamber of Commerce’s Calendar Page. Look for “Underwater 101″ being held July 28 and click on the link where you can sign up or ask additional questions. Otherwise, you are always free to contact us at the link above or here.

Underwater 101