Updates from January, 2010

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  • Condo Groups In Financial Pain

    2:32 pm on January 5, 2010 | Comments:0
    Tags: , , , , , , , ,   Filed under: Bradenton, Buyer Info, Condominiums, Sarasota, Seller Info, The Housing Market

    By MICHAEL BRAGA, The Herald Tribune – January 3, 2010

    The continuing foreclosure flood is creating severe financial problems for condominium associations across Florida, and members are complaining that banks and mortgage companies are doing nothing to help.

    Rich DiBello is the sales and rental director for Villagio Condominiums in Sarasota. Condo associations are facing financial difficulties, and many say lenders aren't doing enough to help.

    In fact, condo owners say that many lenders are delaying foreclosures to avoid paying association dues. That is requiring associations to slash costs and cut amenities, and forcing owners to fork over more cash to keep complexes humming.

    In something of a Catch-22, the financial problems at condo complexes also are prompting banks to tighten restrictions on lending.

    Banks will not lend in complexes that have not set aside 10 percent of their budgets for reserves. They will not lend when more than 50 percent of the units are rented. They also will not lend where a few owners control too many of the units or where too many owners are in default on their mortgages and dues.

    Those restrictions only make the crisis worse by driving condo values down and prompting more people to bail on their units, said Perry Corneau, a Sarasota real estate agent who specializes in condos. (More …)

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  • In The Gulf, Enough Islands to Match Any Personality

    10:16 am on November 11, 2009 | Comments:0
    Tags: , , , , Lido Key, , , , , , , ,   Filed under: Bradenton, Sarasota, The Gulf Islands

    By Andrea Sachs  – THE WASHINGTON POST
    Sunday, November 8, 2009

    LittleGasparilla-04Anna Maria Island: Low-key and all-natural

    Anna Maria Island is Florida as a living diorama, with no chain hotels, a speed limit that never exceeds 35 mph and a building limit of three stories. It is also home to a genteel first lady.

    “We are loath to go the route of Longboat Key, with condo high-rises,” said Rhea Chiles, the wife of former Florida governor Lawton Chiles, whose family has owned property here since 1958. “The look of the place has been passed down from one generation to another. It’s all of those words: quaint, neighborly, natural.”

    Chiles was the visionary behind the Studio at Gulf and Pine, a multi-use space that exhibits local artworks, including a painting of her own, and holds classes, such as the book club I was making her late for. So I left Chiles to her plot twists for the turns of a kayak.

    Shawn Duytschaver, whose family opened the first gift shop on Anna Maria, owns Native Rentals, where he rents boats and preps guests before pushing them off to fend for themselves. He suggested that I paddle Robinson Preserve, a 400-acre mangrove and salt marsh reserve that opened last year and is buffered from motorized traffic. (By comparison, he said that around nearby Lido Key, kayakers must contend with the din of boats and cars.)

    (More …)

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  • Tax Credit May Offer Foreclosure Buffer

    10:57 am on November 10, 2009 | Comments:0
    Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,   Filed under: Bradenton, Buyer Info, Sarasota, Seller Info

    By Tom Bayles, Tuesday, November 10, 2009

    Stan Humpfries, Zillow.com chief economist

    Stan Humpfries, Zillow.com Chief Economist

    Home values are still falling in the Sarasota-Bradenton market, but the trend is showing signs of slowing — and might slow further with the recent passage of an extended home buyers tax credit, Zillow.com’s chief economist said Monday.

    Stan Humphries, who last month predicted through an analysis of the regional market for the Herald-Tribune that a new wave of foreclosures would further depress prices in Manatee and Sarasota counties, said Congress’ move to extend the tax credit both in length and breadth could ameliorate some of the potential drop in Southwest Florida.

    “We could see a bump in demand that could partially offset the increased supply of foreclosed homes on the market,” said Humphries, chief economist for the online home valuation service. “The credits are likely to bring continued stabilization in prices over this period versus the price declines that we almost certainly would see otherwise.“  Zillow released an analysis on Monday that showed home values in Sarasota-Bradenton fell 14 percent in the third quarter compared with the same period in 2008. Prices in the Charlotte County market dropped 10 percent during the same time frame. But prices in the region were near what is considered statistically flat from the second quarter to the third, which ended in September.

    Meanwhile, another set of data from housing tracker Metrostudy also found some signs of life in new home construction in Southwest Florida.

    Builders in the region started more homes in the third quarter than in the previous two quarters combined, and the boost was not limited to the lower price ranges, which has been where the builders who have remained busy during the downturn have focused.

    There were 155 new homes started in the region at a price below $200,000 during the most recent quarter, a 9.9 percent increase from the second quarter. In the $200,000 to $350,000 range, there were 131 starts, up 4 percent. Forty-three homes priced above $350,000 were started in the third quarter, nearly double the second quarter tally, Metrostudy reported.

    The company also uses finished vacant inventory as a fundamental indicator to monitor the health of housing markets. That inventory in this region dropped 30 percent in all price ranges, though the total still remains above a level of equilibrium, Metrostudy said.

    HOME FACTS

    The Zillow Home Value Index measures the value of all homes, not just those those that were on the market and sold. The online home valuation service released this data Monday on Southwest Florida’s real estate market.

    SARASOTA-BRADENTON

    Nearly 50 percent of single-family homes with mortgages were underwater at the end of September.

    Homes that sold for a loss numbered 47.2 percent of all homes sold in September.

    Home values dropped an average 14.3 percent in September compared with the same month in 2008 to $155,300. But in the short-term, home values were nearly statistically flat with a drop of 1.1 percent from the second quarter to the third.

    CHARLOTTE COUNTY-NORTH PORT

    About 40 percent of single-family homes with mortgages were underwater at the end of September.

    Homes that sold for a loss numbered about 41 percent of all homes sold in September.

    Home values dropped by 10.6 percent in September compared with the same month in 2008 to $122,400. But similar to Sarasota-Bradenton, the drop was nearly statistically flat with an increase of 1.1 percent from the second quarter to the third.

    SOURCE: Zillow.com

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  • Bradenton's Village of the Arts

    5:02 pm on November 4, 2009 | Comments:0
    Tags: ArtCenter Manatee, , Farmer's Market, , , , , , South Florida Museum   Filed under: Bradenton

    Revitalized Bradenton

    Village Voices & Eclectic Art Emporium is in Bradenton’s Village of the Arts, a reclaimed neighborhood. (Vanessa Rodgers/Bradenton Area Cvb)

    Revitalized Bradenton Brims with Artistic Flair

    By Beth D’Addono of the Boston Globe

    BRADENTON, Fla. – Turn onto 12th Street West, and it’s clear that this isn’t your average neighborhood. Instead of the usual bungalows, there is a riot of lime green picket fencing, a mural that pairs Frida Kahlo with an emaciated Christ figure, and a giant cow statue painted blue. And that’s just within two blocks.

    Welcome to Village of the Arts, a funky collection of more than 35 galleries, studios, cafes, and shops stretching between 9th Street and 16th Street West, and 9th and 14th Street West in what was once a rough section just south of downtown Bradenton, 50 miles south of Tampa on Florida’s Gulf Coast.

    Formerly a place known for crack houses and prostitutes, Village of the Arts started as a grass-roots attempt to reclaim the neighborhood by a few brave artists in search of cheap real estate and a community. A decade later, what began as a social experiment has become a reason for locals and visitors to spend time away from Bradenton’s sandy beaches.

    Bonni Brown was one of the first to stake a claim. The former New York clinical social worker opened a bakery cafe in September 1999. “We bought this place from a man arrested for shooting at crackheads. Got a great deal.’’ Today, the 100-year-old building houses Bonni Bakes, a friendly spot to have fresh mango lassi, a curried chicken salad sandwich, and a slice of red velvet cake. “We still get locals who’ve lived here all their lives and say, ‘When did all this happen?’ We’ve finally got some signs up, which will help a lot.’’

    Brenda Smoak is the newest kid on the block. She opened Alchemy, a fair trade consignment shop representing 145 artists, in early October, leaving her gallery in Silver Springs, Md., behind. “I moved here because of this place – it felt like a community,’’ Smoak said. (More …)

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