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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.

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

Shadow Inventory Hurts Housing Rebound

300px I 195 Miami eastbound Shadow Inventory Hurts Housing Rebound

Image via Wikipedia

According to an analysis by Standard & Poor’s, it will take an average of 49 months to clear the nation’s supply of homes that are in some stage of foreclosure.

The 49-months forecast is up 40% from a year ago. These properties are referred to as “shadow inventory” because they ultimately will go on the market even though they’re not currently listed for sale. This shadow inventory is seen as one of the larger obstacles to a rebound in home values because lenders are likely to re-sell these properties at deep discounts.

In the Miami metro area, which has $57.8 billion worth of shadow inventory, S&P estimates it will take 60 months — five years — to work through these distressed homes. On the bright side, the 60 months is unchanged from the third quarter of 2010 and a year ago.

Miami is the only one of the top 20 metro areas surveyed that didn’t see an increase compared with the third quarter and a year ago.

 Shadow Inventory Hurts Housing Rebound

South Florida Housing Market Dominated by Cash Buyers

300px Cshpi peak.svg South Florida Housing Market Dominated by Cash Buyers

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According to Zillow.com, cash buyers represented more than half of all transactions in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area last year. In the fourth quarter of 2006, they represented just 13% of deals. Meanwhile, downtown Miami prices rose 15% in 2010 from a year earlier, according to the Miami Downtown Development Authority.

According to Raymond James’s equity research division, the percentage of buyers in Phoenix paying cash hit 42% in 2010 — more than triple the rate in 2008.

Nationally, 28% of sales were all-cash transactions last year, according to the National Association of Realtors. The rate was 14% in October 2008, when the trade group began tracking the measure.

Richard Stoker, a retired sales executive, recently plunked down cash for two condominiums in Miami Beach, and plans to close on one more in coming days. He loves the complex’s ocean views, four swimming pools and activities such as yoga and Pilates. But what also motivated the purchase, said the 73-year-old, was that “the prices were just irresistible. Florida’s been hit pretty hard.” Stoker could have taken out mortgages, but decided to pay cash. He states: “It was a good time to lighten up in the art market and take on real estate at a favorable price.”

Some of the cash purchases reflect a tight lending environment, where even people with good credit and ample down payments are sometimes turned away for conventional borrowing.

Henry Schlangen, an agent with real-estate firm Pacific Union International who buys and sells for clients, states: “The rates are great but the underwriting is brutal. They hang these people upside down and shake them till they see what falls out of their pockets. So people are buying with cash and maybe they’ll ‘refi’ later.”

Nationally, it isn’t clear whether prices have bottomed. The Case-Shiller index of housing prices in 20 cities showed a steep decline in prices until 2009, when they appeared to bottom and began to trend upward. But in the second half of last year, prices began falling again.

 South Florida Housing Market Dominated by Cash Buyers

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

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

The $84 Million Palm Beach Spec Home

1 newly completed on 2 and a half acres The $84 Million Palm Beach Spec HomeFor builders, spec homes built without a signed buyer is usually a risky venture – they are stuck paying the bills until the house sells.  That’s manageable for the average spec, since they are usually priced between $100,000and $300,000. But what about the carrying costs of an $84 million house?

According to Zillow.com, that’s the asking price of a French Chateau-style waterfront home listed for sale in Palm Beach.

The 27,355-square-foot, eight-bedroom, nine-bathroom mansion was built by Dan Swanson, a high-end developer, who’s built many communities in Florida and is no stranger to the spec building game. He spared no expense: The home boasts a lakeside dining room that can accommodate more than 20 guests, 6 juice bars and a wine room with space for over 3,000 bottles. There’s also a separate guest house, boat dock, enough parking for more than 50 cars, and a 60-foot heated pool featuring fountains.  This property has everything, including it’s own website!

This estate, located at 1220 S. Ocean Avenue, was apparently listed for sale last year at $75 million, but it was relisted this week at a much higher price.

Given the usually risks of spec construction–and the fact Florida remains one of the states hardest-hit by the real estate crash–we’re not sure if a price increase is the right direction.

Of course, we might be wrong.

Stay tuned for what the house sells for– and when.

 The $84 Million Palm Beach Spec Home

Broward County: Home Prices Up & Sales Down; Palm Beach County: Prices Down & Sales Are Up

300px Cities of Palm Beach County.svg Broward County: Home Prices Up & Sales Down; Palm Beach County: Prices Down & Sales Are Up

Even though Broward County home prices rose this past September, a long-term recovery hinges on the depth and duration of foreclosure freezes by several big lenders.

Yesterday, according to Florida Realtors, the county’s median price of existing homes sold last month was $214,200, a 7% increase from a year ago and sales fell 16% to 673.

In Palm Beach County, the median price dropped 7% to $225,900, while sales rose 7% to 801.

Prices in the two counties have been up and down for most of the year. And that could continue following the recent clamor over foreclosure paperwork.

During the past month, Bank of America, GMAC, JPMorgan Chase and PNC Financial Services halted all or parts of their foreclosure processes in Florida and other states, reducing the number of cases handled in the courts.

A spokesman for the Palm Beach County Clerk said courts there cancelled more than half of the 1,700 sales of foreclosed homes, during the month of October through Monday.

According to the Clerk of Courts office, in Broward County, figures for October were not available. But in September, almost 38% or 1,411 of the 3,762 scheduled foreclosure sales were cancelled during the month.

The number of cases moving through the court system “is very light,” Broward Chief Judge Victor Tobin said. He states: “Last week was very slow and this week is slow.”

Analysts predict that if the foreclosure delays spread to other banks and last into next year, the resulting backlog will keep the housing market depressed.

Distressed homes, including foreclosures, accounted for 35% of sales nationwide in September.

Real estate agents and mortgage brokers expect prices to increase temporarily because fewer foreclosed homes are available for sale. But once the freezes are over, those properties will flood the market, causing prices to fall again, as they have for much of the past five years.

Tom Meyer, chief executive of Kislak Mortgage in Miami Lakes, said roughly half the home loans his firm is working on have been suspended. Loan officers tell him that borrowers now are interested in non-foreclosed homes because they don’t want to worry about potential problems postponing or canceling sales. He states: “I think that indicates that prices will stabilize and increase, albeit for a short period of time. But that won’t be a fundamental reflection of a stronger housing market.”

Moody’s Economy.com doesn’t expect the foreclosure freezes to last long enough to hurt housing’s supply and demand. Chris Lafakis, an economist covering Florida for Economy.com states: “It may just be a matter of weeks.”

On Monday, which was supposed to be the day Bank of America re-started its foreclosure process, the nation’s largest mortgage servicer pulled back from its announced schedule. A bank spokesman said its attorneys had asked courts in the judicial foreclosure states not to proceed with 102,000 cases. In a statement, he insisted “the bases for our foreclosure decisions have been accurate.”

According to spokesman Dan Frahm said, the average borrower in foreclosure in the third quarter was 18 months behind on payments and one in three properties was already vacant.

Bank of America said it has reviewed its process and has put in place new steps and controls.

Foreclosure defense attorneys are skeptical that the process can be re-started smoothly.

Attorney Gary Handin of Coral Springs concludes: “I can’t understand how they can have tens of thousands of foreclosure cases resolved quickly. I’m a small office and if you asked me to go through every one in my office it’d probably take us a month.”

 Broward County: Home Prices Up & Sales Down; Palm Beach County: Prices Down & Sales Are Up

Nation’s Largest Banks Hold Over 20 Billion in Foreclosures EACH

4047601378 878a0d7dd3 m Nations Largest Banks Hold Over 20 Billion in Foreclosures EACH
Image by SEIU International via Flickr

According to new data released this week, the nation’s largest banks are holding enormous volumes of distressed home loans. Not only has the housing crisis left major lenders knee-deep in an ocean of non-performers, but added exposure to early delinquencies means they could sink even deeper.

According to an analysis by Weiss Ratings, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo each reported more than $20 billion in single-family mortgages currently foreclosed or in the process of foreclosure as of midyear. In addition, Weiss found that for each dollar these banks held of mortgages in foreclosure, there were an additional $2 in loans in the pipeline that were 30 days or more past due.

Among all U.S. banks, JPMorgan Chase has the largest volume of mortgages in foreclosure or foreclosed with $21.7 billion. On top of that, the company has $43.4 billion more in mortgages past due.

Compared to JPMorgan, Bank of America has a somewhat smaller volume of foreclosures — $20.3 billion — but it has a larger pipeline of past-due mortgages at $54.6 billion.

Wells Fargo’s foreclosures come to $20.5 billion, with $48 billion in overdue home loans.

According to Weiss, including all foreclosed and delinquent categories, Bank of America has the largest volume of bad mortgages among U.S. banks, with $74.9 billion, while Wells Fargo has the second largest with $68.6 billion.

Other banks, despite their large size, are less heavily exposed to mortgage difficulties. Citibank has $6.3 billion in foreclosures and $19.2 billion in past-due mortgages, or a total of $25.6 billion.

The volume of foreclosures and delinquencies held by other large banks, such as U.S. Bank ($9.5 billion), PNC Bank ($8.9 billion), and SunTrust ($7.3 billion) is even smaller.

Martin D. Weiss, chairman of Weiss Ratings, states: “In addition to the volume of bad mortgages, the vulnerability of each bank to the foreclosure crisis depends on the capital and loan loss reserves it has set aside to cover losses and other factors such as its earnings, liquidity, reliance on less-stable deposits, and the quality of its overall loan portfolio.”

Among banks with $1 billion or more of mortgages already foreclosed or in process of foreclosure, Weiss found that Wells Fargo has the greatest exposure to bad mortgages in proportion to its capital. For each dollar of Tier 1 Capital, the bank has 75.4 cents in bad mortgages, or a ratio of 75.4%.

The equivalent ratios for JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and SunTrust are 66.8%, 66%, and 57.6%, respectively.

Weiss explained that losses on foreclosures and past-due loans will first be absorbed by the banks’ loan loss reserves, but then they may have to dip into capital. He states: “Considering that many large banks also take other kinds of risks beyond strictly home mortgages. These are very large exposures that could directly impact shareholders and even the safety of depositors.”

Reflecting both their exposure to foreclosures and the other economic factors, the JPMorgan, BofA, and Wells all merit a rating of D (“weak”) or lower from Weiss Ratings, indicating vulnerability to financial difficulties and instability if conditions continue to deteriorate.

 Nations Largest Banks Hold Over 20 Billion in Foreclosures EACH

Wells Fargo Releases Q3 Report Explaining Lack of Foreclosure Freeze

3967839626 ddbce1663c m Wells Fargo Releases Q3 Report Explaining Lack of Foreclosure Freeze

Yesterday, Wells Fargo & Co. released its third quarter profits, with earnings per share of 60 cents, an increase of 7% from the 55 cents earned in Q3 2009 and an increase of 9% from the 56 cents reported for Q2.

The net income for the company was $3.35 billion in the third quarter of 2010, higher than both the $3.06 billion for Q2 and the $3.24 billion for Q3 2009. The net income for the year was reported as $8.95 billion, which was lower than the $9.45 billion net income for the same period of the eight months ending September 30, 2009.

The San Francisco, California-based company reported that it extended $176 billion in credit to customers and businesses during the quarter, attributing the 17% growth to increased mortgage originations, commercial loans and lines of credit, home equity lines, and credit card lines. The company also reported that this past quarter was the second highest quarter for mortgage applications ever, earning $101 billion in mortgage originations, up from Q2’s $81 billion

The report stated that more than 2.3 million homeowners benefited from home payment relief through the company’s modifications and refinances from the period of January 2009 to August 31, 2010. During that time the company approved 532,600 mortgage loan modifications and refinanced 1.8 million mortgage loans. The company says it owned a residential mortgage servicing portfolio of $1.8 trillion at the end of Q3.

John Stumpf, Chairman and CEO of Wells Fargo, released a statement within the report touting the credibility and practices of the company and explaining the company’s decision not to partake in a foreclosure freeze like many of the top lenders. He states: “With respect to recent industry-wide foreclosure issues, there are several important facts to know about Wells Fargo. Foreclosure is always a last resort, and we work hard to find other solutions through multiple discussions with customers over many months before proceeding to foreclosure. We are confident that our practices, procedures and documentation for both foreclosures and mortgage securitizations are sound and accurate. For those reasons, we did not, and have no plans to, initiate a moratorium on foreclosures.”

Despite higher-than-expected earnings per share and a large amount of mortgage originations, revenue for the company was down, coming in at $20.9 billion compared with $21.4 billion in Q2 2010 and $22.5 billion in Q3 2009. The company blamed the $520 million decline in total revenue on net debt and equity security gains, PCI loan resolution income, and the impact from changes to Regulation E and related overdraft policy changes.

 Wells Fargo Releases Q3 Report Explaining Lack of Foreclosure Freeze
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