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South Florida Market Review

Ina Paiva Cordle”s reporting in The Miami Herald provides great context for the South Florida real estate market and reaffirms what we realtors are experiencing in the market. Real estate in South Florida is affordable and there is a terrific variety of properties for sale, and high rates of absorption have lowered inventory levels creating a more balanced market. Many reports are suggesting that home values may have hit bottom in 2011, retreating to 2002 levels, but are creeping upward now.

 

 

Here are how March home values for some areas compare to 2011.

Place Value change
Broward County $129,000 +1.7%
Pompano Beach $114,200 +7.1
Fort Lauderdale $187,300 +6.4%
Hallandale $127,300 5.4%
Cooper City $246,500 +4.3%
Plantation $182,900 +4.3%
Hollywood $134,900 +3.6%
Weston $283,800 +3.4%
Miramar $150,600 -1.3%
Pembroke Pines $157,900 -1.6%
Davie $181,300 -4.5%
Miami-Dade County $151,800 +1.5%
Bal Harbour $601,100 +19.8%
Sunny Isles Beach $260,900 +13.5%
Coral Gables $483,700 +10.5%
Miami Beach $240,400 +7.8%
Doral $220,500 +7.1%
Homestead $82,900 +3.2%
Miami $186,100 +2.6%
Hialeah $114,500 -1.2%
Miami Gardens $97,400 -5.0%
Opa-locka $63,500 -10.6%

Source: Zillow’s Home Value Index

Home values in South Florida rose 1.1 percent year-over-year in March, to $141,300, after reaching bottom in late 2011, according to Zillow’s Home Value Index. Only Phoenix had a higher year-over-year increase, 2.8 percent.

In another report, released by S&P/Case-Shiller, Miami ranked among just five cities in the nation to show an increase in annualized housing prices in February, up 0.6 percent from January, and up 0.8 percent year-over-year.

South Florida’s gains, Zillow’s Humphries said, reflect an uptick from the steep declines experienced since the economic downturn, which set values in South Florida back to July 2002.

The affordability of South Florida real estate has become a beacon to investors, international cash buyers, second home-purchasers and retirees, who have led the surge upward. Zillow’s index predicts that values in South Florida will rise another 5.6 percent during the next year.

Steve Roberge
FloridaMoves.com | 954Home.com
Cell:   954.495.7037 | Efax:  954.208.0510

Categories
architecture

Eight Exceptional Properties and 180 Exceptional Agents

This happened a few weeks ago, but still worth talking about. Picture 180 real estate agents from downtown, Wellesley, Arlington, Newton, Weston Cambridge and Brookline. In town cars, Mercedes buses and on foot. Give them a chance to tour eight phenomenal properties in Beacon Hill, Back Bay and the South End – from $1.8M to $6.3M – and you have a wonderfully dynamic mix of properties and personalities. Ken Tutunjian was the creative director of the tour and Jeffrey Heighton was the Beacon Hill office host.

And I was transportation director, go figure. You try coordinating six vehicles picking up and dropping off 180 agents over three hours at eight different addresses who were all hungry and needed restrooms by 11AM. Amazingly, the tour was a smashing success.

                      

The goal was to group some of our best luxury properties so that a broad assortment of agents from downtown and the near metro west burbs could see a remarkable representation of downtown luxury inventory. Transport them in luxury, arm them with pertinent information, give them guided tours of each home and of course, provide a sumptuous luncheon at Smith & Wollensky’s sponsored by Boston.

My personal favorite was 129 Charles Street. It was the only single family residence on Charles Street. What a surprise! A totally reworked interior, very modern, very open and unbelievably sophisticated – all inside a very traditional Charles Street brick exterior. $4.75M