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Now is the time to Buy
Real Estate in Florida
Hopeful homebuyers in
Florida should act now: The
price is right as the
state’s single-family
residential housing market
bottoms out, according to a
University of Florida study
released today. “If you’re thinking of
buying a house, there’s
probably not much to be
gained by holding out at
this point,” says Wayne
Archer, director of UF’s
Bergstrom Center for Real
Estate Studies. “It doesn’t
look like prices are going
to fall anymore.” The quarterly survey of
experts in the real estate
industry completed in
January shows that the share
of respondents observing a
drop in single-family
housing prices has dipped,
while a growing number find
prices staying even with
inflation, Archer says. “We see that as a
benchmark,” he says. “When
prices maintain the same
level as inflation, then
we’re probably in some kind
of equilibrium. It indicates
the market is stabilizing.” The exception is
condominiums, which are
overbuilt and prone to
speculative and naïve
investors, he says. This is the first time in
the UF survey’s five-quarter
history that the buyers’
investment outlook for
residential development has
brightened. It declined for
the first three surveys and
remained flat for the fourth
survey at the end of
October, starting to rise
only in this latest survey. Because of the dominance of single-family housing, the findings have far-reaching and potentially optimistic implications for the state’s real estate industry, Archer says. “You can’t get away from
the fact that the
single-family housing market
is the single largest driver
of the real estate market,”
he says. “Most brokers and
real estate agents are
dealing with single-family
housing. Most lending is for
single-family housing. And
single-family housing drives
home furnishings. So when it
stabilizes, that’s
important.” One possible explanation
for the housing market
turning the corner is a
restricted supply of land
for residential development,
Archer says. The shortage
meant there was less
overbuilding than there
might otherwise have been,
he says. Condos did not have this
land restraint, which is one
reason they are overbuilt,
Archer says. At the same
time, condos are prone to
strong speculative swings
because they are considered
a relatively easy commodity
to exchange; it’s not
difficult to acquire them in
multiple units or to buy
contracts on them, he says. The stabilization of the
single-family housing market
came earlier than
anticipated and is not
expected to affect all parts
of the state equally, Archer
says. The quieter markets
likely will take longer to
rebound than those in
Central and South Florida,
where growth has been
explosive. Jacksonville typically
has been a slower and
steadier market than
Orlando, Tampa-St.
Petersburg, Miami and other
cities in South Florida, but
that is changing, Archer
says. Recently, the
Jacksonville housing market
has picked up momentum. Even with a turnaround,
Archer says he does not
believe Florida’s real
estate market is likely to
reach the same level that it
did at its peak in 2005-06.
“I don’t think any
thoughtful person would
expect sales to go back to
where they were a year or so
ago,” he says. “That was
probably an overheated
condition and it was
extraordinary.” On a positive note,
nearly all other markets,
including apartments and
commercial rental markets,
appear to be remaining
steady or even experiencing
robust growth. “They did not
experience a downturn in the
same sense that the
single-family development
market did and they’re
continuing to be strong,”
Archer says. Optimism about Florida
real estate seems to be
particularly apparent among
foreign investors. Many
respondents commented that
foreign investors and
lenders are aggressively
trying to invest more
capital in the state’s
rental markets. “They apparently have no
fears about the future of
these markets, despite what
we perceive as our problems
with hurricanes, taxes and
other concerns,” Archer
says. For the survey, UF’s
Survey Research Center asked
a series of questions of 318
industry executives, real
estate lawyers, market
analysts, title insurers,
financial advisers, market
research economists, real
estate scholars and other
experts in the field, an
increase over the 183
respondents in the last
survey. |


