Arian Campo-Flores and Conor Dougherty
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ranes are again rising over this city, as the
poster child for the real-estate collapse enjoys a new condominium boom fueled
by foreign investors looking to park their money in U.S. real estate.
For several years after the housing bubble
burst, a glut of towering condo buildings sat largely empty. Condo values
plunged nearly 60% from peak to trough, according to the Miami Association of
Realtors. Financing for buyers and developers dried up.
Now nearly all the once-vacant units are
filled up, and demand is outstripping supply. There are 118 condo towers
proposed in the Miami area, including 35 under construction, according to Condo
Vultures LLC, a real-estate consultancy.
The 41 towers proposed for downtown will add
12,100 new units—well shy of the 22,200 units that were built during the 2003
to 2008 boom, but still a remarkable turnabout given that downtown construction
was essentially dormant until 2011.
"This boom is very reminiscent of where
we were a decade ago," said Peter Zalewski, principal at Condo Vultures.
While the growth feels similar to the
bubble-fueled oversupply that remains a painful memory in Miami, developers
note that robust international demand has created a new cash-financing model
they believe is safer than the easy bank loans that fueled the last boom. They
typically require buyers to put down at least 50% before closing, which means
the owners would lose their money if they walked away.
Under the new payment arrangement, developers
are relying more on buyers' deposits, and less on debt, to fund construction,
which they say puts projects on more solid footing. And because banks have
become stricter about what projects they finance, less-experienced developers
are weeded out, they say.
Developer Carlos Melo relied on that
financing model to build 23 Biscayne Bay, a 17-story project that last year
became the first completed tower of the new cycle. He said the building is
fully sold, and roughly 90% of the owners bought their units as investments and
are renting them out. "They are looking to sit their money in a safe
place," Mr. Melo said.
Miami is just a bigger example of a recent
national tilt toward multifamily buildings—both apartments and
condominiums—instead of the single-family homes that dominated during the
bubble years leading up to the recession. While the majority of national
construction is still of single-family homes, the recent rebound in
construction activity—whether measured by new starts or permits—has been
centred on multifamily buildings.
Commerce Department data released last week
showed nationwide residential building permits rose to their strongest pace
since June 2008, a rise that was driven by a 15% surge in multifamily permits.
About one in three building permits issued this year has been for the largest
multifamily category—buildings that have five or more units—according to Jed
Kolko, chief economist for real-estate website Trulia. From the 1990s until the
housing bubble ramped up in 2004, the share hovered around one in five.
Nationally, builders are responding to rental
demand that remained strong through the recession and today's still-tepid
recovery. They are also correcting the source of overbuilding during the bubble
years.
"Multifamily has been a critical part of
the construction recovery. During the bubble a lot of the overbuilding was in
single-family homes, and as the construction market rebounds and as more people
are looking for rentals, builders have responded with more multifamily
construction," Mr. Kolko said.
The numbers are even more dramatic in and
around Miami. In the South Florida region composed of Miami-Dade, Broward and
Palm Beach counties, roughly 70% of residential construction permits issued
through October have been for multifamily units.
About 7,000 rental apartment units have been
proposed for Miami's greater downtown area, Condo Vultures' Mr. Zalewski said.
Among the factors driving growth are high rental rates and financing that is
more readily available because banks consider the rental market strong. While
the median rental rate in 2009 was $1.48 a square foot, it is now $2.23 a
square foot, Mr. Zalewski said.
The city's condo boom has been even stronger,
fueled by foreign investors who typically pay cash and are looking to hold
rentals, instead of flipping for profit as investors did in the last cycle.
About 85% to 90% of new-construction buyers are foreign, mostly Latin American,
estimates Alicia Cervera Lamadrid, managing partner at Cervera Real Estate,
which is handling sales for 16 condo projects.
"The payment structure really separated
the speculators from the well-funded," Ms. Cervera Lamadrid said.
Buyers say they are drawn to Miami's
increasingly cosmopolitan vibe and cultural offerings such as the Pérez Art
Museum Miami, which is set to open Dec. 4 [Today]. They also consider such
investments more secure than leaving their money in more economically volatile
places like Argentina and Venezuela.
Miami's high-end condo market has proved
especially vibrant, and has gone hand in hand with new luxury shopping
destinations rising up in the Brickell financial district downtown and the
Design District to the north. Some of the most lavish projects have drawn star
architects like Zaha Hadid and Bjarke Ingels.
In August, Umberto Mascagni, a 24-year-old
Italian who moved to Miami three years ago to study international business, put
down a deposit on a $700,000 two-bedroom condo in a proposed tower overlooking
Biscayne Bay that has yet to break ground. He and his father began investing in
Miami real estate in 2008 and now have six additional condos they rent out.
"In the past two years, the market has been crazy," Mr. Mascagni
said. He is prowling for other investment opportunities, he said, but
"always with open eyes, always careful."
Still, some are sounding cautionary notes.
Developers are sometimes starting construction with just buyers' deposits,
without lining up financing to ensure they can finish it off, said John
Sumberg, managing partner of the law firm Bilzin Sumberg, who advises
developers. "They figure, 'I'll get it when I need it,' " he said.
But "at some point in the cycle, the lenders may say there's too much
product and this isn't a good bet."
In addition, some developers are backing away
from buying land because prices have risen so much, Mr. Sumberg said. That
could "curb the dramatic velocity we've seen" in new construction, he
said.
Carlos Rosso, who heads the condo division
for the Related Group, a developer burned badly in the last cycle, said a
similar bust is unlikely this time around. "As long as there's cash from
buyers and banks are disciplined enough not to overextend themselves, I think
this is a long market because there's so little supply," he said. His
company now has 10 condo projects under way, compared with more than 30 it
built in the last upcycle.
Also, the sales pace isn't as frenzied as in
the last decade. "Back then, I saw lines at sales offices starting at
12:00 the night before" they opened, said Alan Ojeda, chief executive of
the Rilea Group, a developer. "I don't see lines now."
Source: Wall Street Journal
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