‘Marketplace’

Buying a Foreclosure Auction Property

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Buying foreclosures at the auction is a great way to purchase a property under market value. Most properties are auctioned at the property address, some at the courthouse. The location will be listed in the foreclosure auction listing. The property is auctioned off to the public and the highest bidder walks away with the property. This can be very rewarding to those who are in a position to buy the property within a short amount of time and can be devastating to those who bid without proper financing in place.

Most auctions require a small deposit down of the purchase price on the spot and the remaining balance usually within 1-30 days. So make sure you have you deposit ready and your financing is in order before you bid. If you are unable to get financing within the allotted time, you will most likely lose your down payment, and they will auction the property off again.

Buying foreclosures at the auction is also the riskiest place to pick up a foreclosure. You are buying the property in “As Is” condition so it’s very important to do your homework before you just go to an auction and bid on a property.

When buying foreclosures at the auction, we recommend you: – first visit a local auction to get a feel for the bidding procedure, find out how much is required as a down payment and when the rest is due – get proper financing in order (speak with a lender) – research properties and do your homework prior to the auction date (get a title search) – calculate potential profits – determine the most you will bid for the property – follow the property to the auction and participate Buying Foreclosures that are Real Estate Owned (REO)

How to add foreclosure auction listings to your real estate buying watchlist: When foreclosure auction listings are posted, you have about a two week window before the auction. This is where you can get in contact with the owner or foreclosing mortgage holder to purchase the property before the auction. Another way to use foreclosure auction listings to your advantage comes when no one purchases these properties at the auction. These properties will then go into the reo – bank owned property listings. At this step, you will be able to get into contact with the bank and work out a deal. The banks are not interested in selling real estate, they want to lend money. The Reo process is a great opportunity to purchase foreclosures at tremendous savings.

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A Reexamine of Flowing Condo Marketplace Inventories in Miami Beach

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

The city of Miami Beach is one of the United States’ most fashionable and one of the truly coveted destinations. The city is a famous tourist, fashion and entertainment, film, fine dining and premier arts and culture destination. However, nothing best defines the city’s characteristic more than the unique, highly artistic, architectural landscape being painted by Miami Beach condos and South Beach condos.

Miami Beach is known as an International Mecca for travel, business and to establish a home. From its small hotels with unique designs that line up along lower Collins Avenue and Ocean Drive, to its major upmarket hotel chains along the beach.

The City Has Had Its Fair Share Of Condo Boom Times

The area’s extensive redevelopment has catapulted it into the higher levels of real estate in South Florida and the US as well, more so with the place being a well-known bastion of consumerism and all-out hedonism, with it’s thriving party, celebrity scene, and entertainment scene.

The city’s real estate investment options include ready for occupancy condominiums, and are setting the benchmarks when it comes to the building of elegant, sophisticated and amenity-filled condo developments. The area’s most prolific developers, renowned architects and hippest designers are making their mark on the city’s eclectic lifestyle, one that best describes the art of indulgence and opulence.

Current Condo Prices For The City

According to local real estate analysts, the average condo prices based on October, 2007 levels for each of the city’s districts are the following: Miami Beach – $496,000; West Avenue – $463,060; Star, Palm and Hibiscus Islands – $2,788,143; Downtown Miami – $555,590; Biscayne Corridor and Wynwood, Edgewater – $448,487.

Local property analysts further noted that during the month of November, 2007, the average time needed to sell a condo in Miami Beach was 153 days.

Have Condo Supply Levels Dropped?

From a more wider perspective, the city of Miami Beach saw a 19 percent slide in its condominium levels since last month. Miami Beach did not come close to experiencing the level of development that we recently saw in Miami.

Most of overseas and out-of-state home buyers are also more likely to purchase a condo unit in this city than they are somewhere in the Miami-Dade area. Many think that the city will continue to see an increasing gap between the Miami and Miami Beach condo supply figures in the months ahead.

Over the years, tourism has been the city’s major economic driving force; however today, the area’s economy is diverse today. In recent years, it has expanded way beyond its traditional tourism-based cash cow, and has reinvented itself to become a multi-faceted real estate, entertainment, culture, health care and tourism center. This is an area where nearly 95,000 residents live, work, shop, go to school, have fun and go dining, and do many leisure activities.

The city’s cultural scene is diverse, and takes pride itself in having the Miami City Ballet and the New World Symphony. Though the city’s geographic borders are set, its economic growth is booming, and many public works investments, like the proposed Baylink project, that is expected to create a mass transit connection between Miami Beach and the mainland Miami area, continues to reinvigorate the area.

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