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The Epitome of Luxurious Living is Found in this CORPORATE OWNED Mediterranean Estate Located in The Oaks

GSIG LLC is excited to announce the launch of our new company GSIG Premier.
GSIG Premier will be focusing on high-end luxury REO assets, such as the one below that has been listed today.

NEW LUXURY REO LISTING IN BOCA RATON
The epitome of luxurious living is found in this CORPORATE OWNED Mediterranean inspired estate in the private gated enclave of The Oaks. A spillover spa flows into the resort-style pool, while the loggia and summer kitchen provide the perfect retreat for luxurious outdoor living.

This Mediterranean-style estate spares no detail, comprising 8,020± total square feet with 6 bedrooms, 7 full and two half baths, and a 4-bay garage. Exquisite touches like Jerusalem marble floors and custom built-ins abound throughout the interior.

First Floor: Dramatic design is the hallmark of this exquisite home. Entered from the double mahogany doors and grand foyer, the formal living room is highlighted by a cast coral fireplace and a wall of windows overlooking the pool and patio beyond. Richly appointed built-in shelves and cabinets make a striking statement in the sprawling study. A generously proportioned family room flows into the breakfast area and exquisitely appointed chef’s kitchen, where custom cabinetry and granite counters are accented by professional grade appliances and center island. A double door entry introduces the beautifully scaled master suite, a private sanctuary complete with two custom-fitted walk-in closets and lavish his-and-her marble baths.

Second Floor: The sweeping marble staircase leads to the second level, where two bedroom suites are equipped with private baths and terraces. A third bedroom connects to second level family room.

South Florida Leads the Country in Rentals

150x104 South Florida Leads the Country in Rentals

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According to a study this week from Harvard University, South Florida leads the nation in renter households spending more than half of their incomes on housing.

About 34% of households in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties spent more than half of their gross pay on rent and utilities in 2009, the most recent year for which statistics are available. That’s up from 26% a decade earlier, when South Florida also topped the list.

Susie Chung, a researcher at Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies thinks that incomes for South Florida renters aren’t high enough to support the area’s rental rates. Other major cities like Boston and New York offer higher incomes so that renters can more easily afford housing costs, she said.

The Center for Housing Policy in Washington, D.C., came to a similar conclusion earlier this year. Its study based on 2009 figures showed that South Florida renters and homeowners face the nation’s biggest burden in monthly housing costs.

Officials say that renters and homeowners should aim to spend less than a third of their incomes on housing.

 South Florida Leads the Country in Rentals

Cash Home Sales Dominate South Florida Market

300px Hundred dollar bill 02 Cash Home Sales Dominate South Florida Market

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The reign of cut-rate mortgages and easy home loans has finally come to a halt in South Florida, making way for the return of the king — CASH.
According to Zillow.com, about 54% of home purchases in Palm Beach, Broward andMiami-Dade counties were cash buys in the final quarter of 2010. That’s about 7,530 homes and condominiums between October and December that were paid for with cash instead of borrowing. In South Florida’s real estate zenith of 2006, just 13% of sales were in cash. In pre-boom 1997, cash buys made up 31% of the market.

Of 11 major metropolitan areas in the country studied by Zillow, South Florida had the highest percentage of cash buys in the fourth quarter of last year.

Corcoran Group agent Anthony Pizzarelli, who specializes in downtown West Palm Beach condos, states: “I haven’t pulled a mortgage in six months. You just have a lot of people with a lot of cash running around.”

Many of those financially blessed consumers, however, are not South Floridians buying a homestead.

Investors and international buyers are driving the cash deals, including Canadians who get loans in their own country to buy winter escapes here with ready money.

Stricter lending standards also are contributing to the plethora of cash buys.

Spring Hill, Tenn. residents during the summer, Bill and Clara Marie Jessup typically rent a place in South Florida through the fall and winter.

This year, with bargain-basement home prices, the couple decided to buy. They shopped for about two weeks before getting a $149,000 cash contract on a three-bedroom, two-bathroom pool home in Palm Beach Gardens that is bank-owned.

Clara Marie Jessup said they decided to pay cash because they believe a home will bring a better return on their money than a CD or other investment.

“Any kind of interest income is so low right now, we might as well put it into a house,” she said. “If prices go down any more, they’re not likely to go down appreciably.”

Ally Bank was offering 1.84% interest last week on a three-year CD. Nationwide Bank offered 1.85%. Jessups’ Realtor Shannon Brink, of Re/Max Prestige Realty in West Palm Beach states: “Hopefully it’s a good sign that the economy is turning around. People are spending money again on Florida real estate.”

According to reports released last week by Realtor groups, sales of existing homes jumped nationally and in Florida in January. Statewide, sales were up 14% compared with January last year. They rose 36% in Palm Beach County.

The National Association of Realtors said the increases were fueled by cash purchases, which accounted for 32% of January home buys nationwide. That’s the highest level since the group started measuring cash deals in October 2008 when they accounted for 15 percent of the market.

According to Kent Clothier, CEO of REI Marketing, LLC in Boca Raton, in Palm Beach County, 2,039 cash deals were done in the last few months of 2010, up 45% compared with the same time in 2009.

William Stronge, a professor emeritus in economics at Florida Atlantic University, said the cash buys are indicative of how far the market has fallen, and will have both a negative and positive effect on South Florida.

While cash is helping sell homes to international investors, it’s not helping create financial sector jobs in the mortgage industry. He states: “In that sense, there might be a slight negative. But on the other hand, you’re attracting people into the market who might not have come otherwise.”

A cash deal is a necessity for Paul Advani. A Toronto Realtor looking to buy a place in South Florida, Advani said he wouldn’t qualify for a U.S. loan. He states: “That doesn’t mean I have cash, cash, cash in my pocket. But I can borrow here and pay cash there.”

Plus, Advani said he thinks he’ll get a lower price with cash. He concludes: “They know the deal is done when it’s cash, there’s no waiting. Cash has power, cash is king.”

 Cash Home Sales Dominate South Florida Market

Home Sales Surge Across South Florida Thanks to Investors

115x150 Home Sales Surge Across South Florida Thanks to Investors

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

According to Florida Realtors, this past January, home sales rose sharply across Palm Beach and Broward counties. Palm Beach County had 745 existing homes trade hands, up 36% from a year ago. Broward sales increased 18% to 813. Existing condo sales in both counties also were robust. Home sales surged across Florida and the nation. Many of the sales are cash deals from investors. Nationally, the share of first-time buyers in January slipped to 29%, down from 40% a year ago.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, said in a statement: “Increases in all-cash transactions, the investor market share and distressed home sales all go hand-in-hand. With tight credit standards, it’s not surprising to see so much activity where cash is king and investors are taking advantage of conditions to purchase undervalued homes.”

While sales were strong, prices were down. Broward’s median home price in January was $165,100, off 5% from a year ago. Palm Beach County’s median fell 19% to $192,800.

 Home Sales Surge Across South Florida Thanks to Investors

Broward County Braces for Fewer Vacancies & Higher Rents

250px Broward County %28Florida%29.svg Broward County Braces for Fewer Vacancies & Higher Rents
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Broward County’s apartment market will be among the nation’s best performing during 2011 –  which means, fewer places to choose from and higher rents.

This according to MPF Research who states Broward apartment vacancy will tighten by 1.6% this year, while rents will rise by about 5%. The county’s monthly apartment rent averaged $1,151 at year-end 2010.

Greg Willett, MPF’s vice president of research, stated: “Fort Lauderdale posted one of the better turnarounds in apartment occupancy seen anywhere across the country during the past year. Additional tightening seems on the way in reflection of the metro’s improving economy and minimal new supply. The upturn in occupancy should be enough to allow rents to really start to move upward.”

Palm Beach County’s rental market isn’t as strong, MPF says. Occupancy will rise 1.7 percentage points in 2011, and rents will inch up 3%.

 Broward County Braces for Fewer Vacancies & Higher Rents

New Regulations For Foreclosure-Ridden Neighborhoods

300px US OfficeOfThriftSupervision Seal.svg New Regulations For Foreclosure Ridden Neighborhoods
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This past Wednesday, the federal bank and thrift regulatory agencies announced changes to the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) parameters in support of stabilizing communities affected by high foreclosure levels.

The final rule, which was issued by the Federal Reserve, FDIC, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Office of Thrift Supervision,  encourages depository institutions to finance development activities in areas that qualify for HUD’s Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP).

Through the agency’s Neighborhood Stabilization Program initiative, HUD has provided funds to state and local governments, as well as nonprofit organizations, to purchase and rehab abandoned and foreclosed properties.

The new rule revises the term “community development” to encourage depository institutions to make loans and investments, and provide services to support NSP activities in areas with HUD-approved plans.

Financial institutions will receive favorable consideration under CRA requirements for their participation in efforts to stabilize local communities where there are large numbers of foreclosures and vacant homes.

Federal regulatory agencies examine banking institutions for CRA compliance, and take this information into consideration when approving applications for new bank branches or for mergers or acquisitions. CRA was initially enacted by Congress in 1974 to encourage depository institutions to meet the credit needs of their local communities by lending to borrowers in all segments, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods.

Under the new rule, financial institutions will receive CRA credit for any NSP-eligible activities, such as loans extended to grant recipients for the purchase of foreclosed homes or for a donation of REO properties to nonprofit housing organizations.

The federal government has allocated nearly $7 billion for HUD’s NSP program to provide what the regulatory agencies described as “emergency assistance” to help alleviate problems brought on by the foreclosure crisis, such as growing inventories of vacant properties, depreciating home values, declining property tax bases and the destabilization of local communities.

 New Regulations For Foreclosure Ridden Neighborhoods

Fannie and Freddie Restart “Frozen” Foreclosure Sales

300px Freddie Mac.svg Fannie and Freddie Restart Frozen Foreclosure Sales
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Great news! Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have instructed usto move forward with transactions involving foreclosed properties in cases where sales were suspended due to potential problems with the legal paperwork.

In a memo released last week, Fannie Mae told its REO selling agents to “proceed with scheduling and holding the closings” and to direct matters to the appropriate staff “if a title issue arises with respect to the potential defect of an affidavit used in the underlying foreclosure.”

Freddie Mac said in its own memo that agents should “resume all normal sales activity…. resume marketing, sales, and disposing of assets previously placed ‘on hold.’”

Fannie and Freddie were forced to temporarily halt the sale of certain properties two months ago when news surfaced that some of the nation’s largest servicers – including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and GMAC Mortgage – had been employing robo-signers who failed to comply with clearly defined state laws when handling foreclosure documentation. Fannie and Freddie also employed the services of the so-called “foreclosure mill” law firm of David J. Stern in Florida, which is currently under intense investigation for forging foreclosure documentation. Both companiesterminated their business dealings with the Stern firm in early November.

Now that most of the servicers at the center of the paperwork mess have completed a large chunk of their case reviews and found no evidence of improper foreclosures, Fannie and Freddie are moving to proceed with foreclosures and REO sales as customary.

As of September 30, Fannie Mae’s inventory of single-family REO properties stood at 166,787. Freddie Mac’sREO inventory totaled 74,897 homes at the end of September. Together, the two GSEs hold about a quarter of all bank-owned residential properties in the United States.

 Fannie and Freddie Restart Frozen Foreclosure Sales

1 in 4 Florida Mortgages are in Trouble

300px US mortgage delinquencies 1 in 4 Florida Mortgages are in Trouble
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Yesterday, the Mortgage Bankers Association released a survey stating that  one of four mortgages is in trouble.

As the huge number of loans already in trouble began to decline, the rate at which home loans fell into foreclosure in Florida in the third quarter increased.

Florida has the largest percent of loans in foreclosure – 13.68% – of any state. That’s down, slightly, from 14.04% in the previous quarter.

Additionally, 11.02% of mortgages in Florida are past due, 30 days or more. That is a small increase from 10.97% in the previous quarter.

Add it all up and in the third quarter, Florida had 813,652 loans either delinquent or in foreclosure, which is down from 849,002 in the second quarter.

Although major lenders including Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase began to halt foreclosures or foreclosure sales at the end of September, those announcements came at the end of the quarter and did not have a big impact on the numbers.

A most troubling point in the report was the percent of new foreclosures started, which rose both in Florida and in the nation. In Florida, that figure was 2.32% in the third quarter, up from 2.07% in the previous quarter.

 1 in 4 Florida Mortgages are in Trouble

Today’s Topic: 5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties

300px Assorted United States coins Todays Topic: 5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties
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If you missed my talk today, no big deal. Here’s the gist:

  1. Purchase Price – Don’t low ball the offer, regardless of if you are an investor or not – Seller’s don’t care if you are buying multiple properties. All that matters is that you are buying THEIRS! When you run your comps and come up with a price, do not discount it dramatically and make adjustments for minor repairs due to the condition of the house. The seller knows what it’s worth and so do you!
  2. Days On Market – If you are intent on buying a property at a discount, target those properties with days on market more than 60 days. Aged properties sit on the books for the bank and they want them gone…However, it doesn’t mean they will give it for free!
  3. Price Reductions, Back On Markets, Etc (Property Statuses) – If a property’s list price was just reduced, do not go much lower than the most recent price. Banks are not willing to drop the price of a home RIGHT AFTER they just reduced it for the market. When a property comes back on the market, the banks want to test the waters again to see if anyone is willing to buy it at the current price.
  4. Proof of funds letters, Hard Money Letters – the better your documentation looks, the more legit you are! Try not to submit a standard, generic hard money letter with an electronic signature dated 2 months old. When submitting a bank statement, make sure you have a statement less than 30 days old – You’re an investor who buys houses, what’s to say you still have the money in the bank?!?!
  5. Check Requirements – Many banks have “First Look” periods, where only offers by owner occupants are accepted, do not lie and do not cheat the system, Banks have ways of searching tax records across the country and cross reference your organizations name. Sometimes fines can be as much as $5,000 that can be held against you for up to 5 years after you buy the property. Submit any and all documentation that is requested UP FRONT. Banks do not accept incomplete offers, therefore if you are missing documents your offer will NOT be presented and another investor may come in and buy the property from under you!

 Todays Topic: 5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties

5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties

Gohomenew  5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties
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Join me for lunch tomorrow (November 17th, 2010) when I speak in front of the South East Florida Real Estate Investors Association (SEFREIA).

Our topic will be “5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties”.

The mission statement of SEFREIA is to network with real estate entrepreneurs, attorneys, agents, mortgage brokers, private lenders and general contractors etc.  The mission of the organization has always been to provide an environment on how to become financially secure by investing in real estate.  SEFREIA members exchange knowledge and experiences in all areas of real estate investing such as getting started, wholesaling, rehabbing, short sales and foreclosures. Whether you are a seasoned investor or a novice, SEFREIA will provide motivation and education to all its members.

See below for details:

Topic: 5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties

Speaker: David Cohen, GSIG LLC

Location: Denny’s, 1250 W Hillsboro Blvd., Deerfield, FL 33441

Time: 12:30pm

Organization: South East Florida Real Estate Investors Association

  5 Top Mistakes Investors Make When Submitting Offers on REO Properties
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