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A convention of buyers
By Linda Rawls
07/018/2004
Adam Raizin recently paid $145,000 for a house on O Street in
Lake Worth.
He sold it for $172,000 in a week or two, he says, but thinks he
could easily have gotten $225,000 or $250,000 if he had painted
and landscaped.
"I'd rather get in and get out," said Raizin, 41. "I
sell for a little bit less. If other houses on the block are selling
for $199,000, I sell for $195,000."
The Lake Worth resident, who buys and resells three or four properties
a year, is part of a growing wave of real estate speculators lured
by soaring property value and rock-bottom interest rates.
Their dream is to pocket profits from the purchase and quick resale
of residential properties, often called flipping.
Experts caution that the real estate boom soon could be over, with
interest rates likely to rise and a dire shortage of homes to buy
and flip.
"I'd like to say that, yes, 100 percent of the people doing
this can make money, but let's face it -- someone will be left holding
the bag," said Randy Bianchi, owner of Paradise Properties
in West Palm Beach.
Once the domain of professionals, flipping has attracted scores
of often-inexperienced investors in hot real estate markets like
Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast looking to profit from
quick sales.
"The market allowed people who have never been able to do
this to buy a second home for an investment, to flip it," Bianchi
said.
People like 25-year-old Patrick Gambale, who didn't even own a
home until October. He has two luxury condominiums under contract
and is studying for his real estate license.
"Real estate has really blossomed here in Palm Beach County,"
said Gambale, a salesman for a financial publisher. "The value
of my home has gone up $50,000 or $60,000 just since I bought it.
I thought I'd take advantage of that and see if I can make some
money."
He's far from alone. For instance, of 15 sales in the pricey Olympia
subdivision in Wellington during the first six months of this year,
nine were resales of homes that had been bought an average of only
10 months earlier. In that short period, the homes resold for increases
that ranged from $20,760 to $148,710, with an average increase of
$68,254, according to property records.
No sign of slowing
Soaring property value lies at the heart of this dream of short-term
windfalls. In Palm Beach County, home prices have skyrocketed 72
percent in five years, according to the Office of Federal Housing
Enterprise Oversight. Prices have jumped 66 percent on the Treasure
Coast during the same time.
The torrid appreciation rate is continuing despite a rise interest
rates, which usually cools demand and stabilizes prices. In Palm
Beach County, for example, the median price of a used home in May,
the latest figure available, was $290,200, up 29 percent over May
2003, according to the Florida Association of Realtors.
Or consider the Treasure Coast's Port St. Lucie -- the nation's
second-fastest-growing city, thanks to an unprecedented residential
building boom -- where property value last year rose 40 percent,
nearly twice as much as any other large city in Florida history.
Martin and St. Lucie counties overall continue their steady home-price
gains, with the median rising in May to $187,800, a 31 percent increase
over May 2003, according to the state Realtor group. (The median
is the midpoint at which half the homes sold cost more, half cost
less.)
The other fuel being thrown on the house-flipping fire is low interest
rates.
Last summer, home mortgages plunged to their lowest rate since
Dwight Eisenhower occupied the White House -- 5.2 percent for a
30-year fixed-rate mortgage. They're expected to remain below 7
percent this year and to average 7.3 percent in 2005, still attractive
enough to keep the market vibrant.
According to mortgage giant Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate
mortgage averaged 6 percent last week -- the fourth straight week
of declines. Such rates not only have made monthly mortgage payments
more affordable, they've also sparked a flurry of cash-out refinancing
that has put large sums of the green stuff into homeowners' pockets.
Disillusioned with the stock market, many of these people turned
to real estate, and in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast
-- two of the hottest housing markets in the nation -- opportunity
beckoned.
Two ways to make money
There are basically two ways to make money flipping residential
property.
"The first is when you buy at a discount," said Cheryl
Linck, director of business development for Illustrated Properties
in Palm Beach Gardens. "You find a handicapped property and
remove the handicap -- fix it up -- and resell it.
"The other way is to bet on the future. You buy a property
at today's value -- a resale or new construction -- and sell it
tomorrow, hopefully at an appreciated amount."
Many of the recent turn-around sales at Olympia were preconstruction
contracts that were flipped, said Douglas Rill, president of Century
21 America's Choice.
"I have three offices, and our Wellington office gets more
buy-and-flip than anywhere else," Rill said, "especially
along the 441 corridor, because there's so much new construction
going up."
But flipping is not limited to Palm Beach County's fast-growing
western communities.
"It's become a huge factor in all subdivision housing,"
said Brad Hunter, director of consulting for Metrostudy in Boca
Raton. "People are buying preconstruction and looking for a
quick sale. The majority of them are ordinary people who know somebody
who knows somebody who made $100,000 in a flip, and they decided
to jump on the bandwagon."
Developers, however, are cracking down on flipping.
First of all, multiple contracts for a single sale create more
paperwork for them. They are also cognizant that the hot market
won't last forever. If an investor holding a lot of contracts defaults,
it can put the development in jeopardy. Moreover, too much house-flipping
can have a negative effect on communities.
"People who are flipping aren't making emotional decisions,"
Century 21's Rill said. "They're making financial decisions,
and because of that they may not get as many upgrades, for instance.
They may not get fancy exteriors. If they can't sell, they may have
to rent, which is generally less desirable."
Condos not immune
Flippers also have flocked to the condominium construction boom.
Of the 3,500 new units being built in downtown West Palm Beach,
as many as 40 percent have been bought by investors, analysts say,
many buyers holding multiple contracts. While some might hold their
units as long-term investments, many hope for a fast sale -- and
profit -- by the time the condos are ready for occupancy.
Condo developers, however, also have taken steps to squelch flipping.
The Related Cos., whose local projects include The Slade and The
Prado in West Palm Beach, The Moorings at Lantana and Marina Village
in Boynton Beach, limits customers to two units.
"We've also got very strict provisions that they cannot assign
a contract without our approval," said Barbara Salk, Related's
vice president of development.
Older condos, of course, have no preconstruction contract issues,
and they are especially hot now -- when you can find them -- especially
along Flagler Drive, said Bianchi of Paradise Properties.
"We get calls on specific buildings now," Bianchi said.
"In Placido Mar, Palm Beach House and La Fontana, for instance,
those prices per square foot have been going up, up, up, and there's
no inventory left," he said. "Three years ago they would
have sat on the market for six months. If I had five Placido Mars
I could sell them tomorrow."
Finding the needle
Buying single-family fixer-uppers is popular, as well, but the supply
of homes is at its lowest in years. Finding properties at a discount
can be difficult if you're an amateur.
"Don't you know every single Realtor is out there looking,
and there are 11,000 Realtors in our MLS?" Illustrated Properties'
Linck said, referring to the Multiple Listing Service of homes on
the market. "It's like looking for a needle in a haystack."
But finding that needle is exactly what's required to make a profit
on a "fix and flip," experts agree -- and that's hard
to do when a for-sale sign can prompt three or four full-price offers
in a matter of days.
"It's hard to buy things at 30 percent to 35 percent under
market, which is where you need to buy to make money once you've
paid for the carrying costs," Century 21's Rill said.
If you're persistent and don't get greedy, however, Lake Worth's
Raizin insists it's possible to find homes for sale at a discount,
and to make money fixing and flipping them.
"I look at 20, 30, 40 houses," Raizin said.
"I drive around with contracts in my car," he said. "You
cannot steal in slow motion. If a good deal is there, seize the
day and grab it. I have everything filled out except the figures."
Raizin, who generally uses other investors' money to buy, said
he splits an average of $30,000 to $60,000 on each flip. That might
sound like easy money, but it's not, he said.
"You have to eat, sleep and drink the market," he said.
"I don't have cable. I don't take weekends off. Every day is
a Monday to me. I love the art of the deal.
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