Archive for May, 2011

The Heat is On! Miami Real Estate Ranked #1 City to Buy

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

Florida real estate finally makes the #1 list for something positive.

With the real estate market in recovery mode, owning a home is more affordable than renting in 72 percent of major U.S. cities. Miami, Las Vegas and Arlington, Texas round out the top three cities where buying is a safer bet.

Renting is more affordable than buying in only eight percent of America’s largest cities, including New York City, Seattle, and Kansas City. The Offices of Weston Title and Oppenheim Law continue to help homeowners navigate through the waters (and under waters) of Florida real estate buying, selling and investing.

Roy Oppenheim on Miami Real Estate: Ranked best place to buy

Housing Market Poll: When Will Florida Recover?

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

The South Florida Law Blog believes it will be at least 2016 before Florida’s housing market fully recovers, but a new study shows many Americans are far more optimistic.

The results are in, and it appears the majority of those surveyed believe 2012 will be the magic year for the housing market. Trulia and RealtyTrac recently polled 2,034 U.S. adults aged 18 years and older to find out when most Americans think the housing market will recover. A mere 10 percent thought a recovery would happen this year, while nearly a quarter of those surveyed predicted a bumpy road until 2015 and beyond.

Despite recent reports that foreclosures have slowed and sales in Broward and Miami-Dade are trending up, Florida is not out of the woods yet. As special guest and Florida real estate developer, Pat Sessions, pointed out during our talk show From The Trenches, the market has yet to bottom out here in Florida.

As always, the South Florida Law Blog continues to share and comment on the latest in real estate news.

The Times They Are A-Changin’: District Courts of Appeal Start Reversing Foreclosure Judgments

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

As a tribute to Bob Dylan’s 70th birthday today, his song “The Times They Are A-Changin” captures the spirit of the social and political upheaval happening in today’s Florida courts. Despite a swollen pipeline of more than half a million pending foreclosure cases, Florida’s appellate courts are starting to send a clear message that banks will not succeed in trampling the Constitutional rights of homeowners.

The times they are a-changin’. And it’s about time.

Florida District Courts of Appeal are ruling in favor of homeowners when procedural due process has been violated as well as in cases where the trial court improperly granted summary judgment in favor of a bank based on lawyers’ assertions that have no evidentiary support on the record.

Recent decisions from the 1st, 3rd, 4th and 5th District Courts of Appeal can provide hope to homeowners and South Florida foreclosure defense attorneys that banks will be forced to start playing by the rules, or risk having their judgments reversed on appeal.

For example, the 5th DCA reversed a summary judgment decision in favor of a bank last month for a lack of evidence on the foreclosing bank’s standing to sue. The Court of Appeal found that documents submitted at trial contradicted the bank’s mere allegations that it was the holder of the note, and therefore allowed to foreclose.

“Taken together, these decisions are powerful evidence that Florida’s appellate courts are increasingly receptive to foreclosure defendants’ complaints that some trial courts are not holding foreclosure plaintiffs to the requirements of Florida Civil Procedure – and perhaps that they are also paying attention to the widely reported improprieties in the mortgage lending industry,” said Dan Bushell, a South Florida appellate attorney, on his blog, Florida Appellate Review.
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Florida Real Estate This Week: The Good, the Sad and the Ugly

Sunday, May 22nd, 2011

Real Estate headlines this week have been a mixed bag of good, sad and ugly.

While the Fort Lauderdale condo market and Broward home sales trended upward, news broke Broward Chief Judge Victor Tobin was resigning his position to work for a law firm that has been called one of the largest foreclosure mills in the state. In national news, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman launched an investigation into the banks’ role in the financial meltdown, and former Wall Street hotshot Raj Rajaratnam was convicted of 14 counts of fraud and conspiracy.

As these banksters fall behind bars, the smoking gun question remains: Why Wall Street isn’t in jail?

The Good
Sales up and inventories down. On a high note, reports this week are encouraging for Broward County. The Miami Association of Realtors released data that condo sales increased 8 percent from April 2010 to April of this year, while single-family home sales increased by 2 percent. As is the trend for today’s buyer, cash transactions represented 67 percent of April’s residential sales. 60 percent of sales were to overseas buyers, many of whom also paid in cash. The Association also reported inventory levels continue to fall, decreasing 20 percent since May 2010 and 5.1 percent from last month. This contradicts national trends: total housing inventory rose 9.9 percent last month. Condo Vultures adds that the Fort Lauderdale condo market is improving almost at the rate of Miami’s, which until recently was considered an anomaly in today’s market.
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