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Thursday, June 4, 2009
Good Deals - Recent Key West Sales
No Good Deed should go unnoticed. There were three sales that hit the mls since June first that I believe are worth noting.
I wrote about 811 Southard Street on December 21st. It was a short sale. It originally listed for $5,300,000 and sold for $2,500,000 or $656 per sq ft CLICK HERE. That is a great price for a great property in a very good Old Town location. Congratulations to Rudy and Roger.
I never got the chance to write about 1020 Southard Street CLICK HERE (the Gingerbread Man House) because it went under contract within a day or so of being listed. It sold at the list price of $1,975,000 or $760 per sq ft. The Gingerbread Man House was renovated a few years ago by the same duo that recently renovated 728 Love Lane. The pretty as a picture house at 728 Love Lane house is on the market now and is priced at $1,795,000. CLICK HERE.
The Buyer of 1020 Southard Street has their "old house" at 1108 Fleming Street on the market. CLICK HERE for more info on this house priced at $1,295,000. I wrote about it CLICK HERE. If you are a serious buyer for a great house in Old Town, consider this property. Remember, the current owner just purchased a very expensive house a block away. Hint! Hint!
Another house I wrote about also closed this week. CLICK HERE to read what I wrote about 924 Flagler Avenue in the Casa Marina area. It was listed for $1,500,000 and sold for $1,250,000 or $606 per sq ft. The house is as original as any I have seen in Key West, and it has been lovingly maintained by the same family since it was built in 1935. The new owner bought a Key West treasurer. Mitzi Krabill represented the seller and I represented the buyer. Congratulations Tim. And Merry Christmas.
Good Deeds, indeed! Each of the three houses I mentioned are important houses in Key West. I'm sure there will be a few readers that think the buyers paid a lot. Wait a couple of years. These buyers will be remembered for the great deals they got.
If you are thinking of buying a place in Key West, you might want to put your property search in full gear. The market of available good houses in good locations is shrinking. CLICK HERE to search the official Key West Association of Realtors mls website. If you see a property that interests you, please contact me, Gary Thomas, 305.766.2642 or e-mail me at kw1101v@aol.com. You don't have to pay a million bucks to get a good deal. But you will never get a good deal if you don't make an effort.
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Wednesday, June 3, 2009
"My seller does not want to lose any money."
I wrote an offer over the weekend on a nice house on the edge of Bahama Village. I point out the location because the location is part of the reason the house has not sold. The house itself is very nice. It has the features many potential second home buyers want: enough bedrooms and baths, new kitchen, off street parking, and charm for days. But the location causes most buyers to not even look or if they do look, to choose another location.
I wrote in my blog about a similar property a few months back. I hosted many "Open Houses" at the height of the buying frenzy at a house on Whitehead Street just off Truman Avenue. It was newly redone by a real craftsman. Everything was great. It had 3 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths, granite countertops, 3/4" solid maple floors, a new pool, new windows and doors, off street parking, and it was charming. It was priced at $595,000 for an all new custom redo. Literally hundreds of people walked through the house during the months I hosted Open Houses. Most of the lookers were on their way to see the Hemingway House or the Southernmost Point. But some were serious lookers that I turned into clients. But nobody ever considered buying that house because of its location. They said if it were on the "other side of Duval" it would have been a different matter. And that is the same problem with the house mentioned above. It is a great house in what most buyers consider to be the wrong location.
Instead, I want to discuss the seller's potential predicament. The seller's agent told me "My seller does not want to lose any money." I can appreciate that. The seller paid "X" for the house and added improvements that cost real dollars. Now, for whatever reason, the seller wants to sell.
The real estate market is different now than it was a few years ago when the seller was the buyer and buyers were buying almost anything. Even back then buyers were resisting "that" location. I'm referring to the similar house I mentioned above. It is located a block or so from the house owned by this potential seller. Instead of being part of a buying frenzy, today's buyers are part of a bottom feeders frenzy. Buyers are looking for deals. But they want they still want location, value, and charm.
A buyer can sometimes create charm by building new or redoing a place. Sometimes. I've seen too many places with botched redos. Charm does not come cheaply or easily. Many properties are certainly better values today. There have been several short sale and bank foreclosure properties that have sold in Old Town, Casa Marina, and The Meadows areas that were real deals. (I wrote about many of them in my blog.)
We are in uncharted territory right now with all of the short sales and bank foreclosures. Many sellers will sign almost any contract as long as they think they will get off the hook and not be held financially responsible for any of the shortfall on the loan. A lot of the properties that have sold were bank owned and sold at a discount. But the discounted prices have pretty much become the "market".
However, there are still some real world/real market properties offered for sale. If a seller really wants or needs to sell in this market, he or she is going to have to meet the market to sell. Crossing of one's arms and defiantly stating "I don't want to sell at a loss!" won't work. Having one's Realtor make the statement won't change anything.
If a seller who owns one thousand shares of GE stock that he bought in 2007 for $35 per share wanted to sell that same stock today he would sell it for around $13.50 per share. Next week it might be worth more. Maybe less. He could refuse to sell it and hope the price recovers. But if he needed to sell, he would have to accept the loss.
Yet many real world "sellers" refuse to accept the fact that they may have to sell real estate at a loss. Unless a property sells for all cash, it is pretty safe to assume that a buyer would need to finance the purchase. Lenders will not lend if a property will not appraise. It is that simple.
I know my buyer won't be getting the house I mentioned above. Maybe the seller really does not need to sell. But my suggestion to the seller's agent was to get an independent appraisal of the current market value. No rational seller wants to sell at a loss. But every seller ought to know what his or her property is really worth in this current market downturn.
CLICK HERE to search the Key West Association of Realtors mls database. When your search is complete you will be able to see how long each listing has been on the market. If a property has been listed for a really long time, ask yourself "Why?". If you see a property that you like and would like more information or would like to schedule a showing, please call me, Gary Thomas, 305.766.2642. I am a full time Realtor at Preferred Properties Coastal Realty Inc in Key West. Our office is an affiliate of Christie's Great Estates.
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Monday, June 1, 2009
Key West Bottom Feeders - Part Two
A year ago today I wrote about the month ending May 31, 2008. CLICK HERE to see what I wrote then in full. Everybody in town continues to be an expert on the state of Key West real estate sales and our local economy. I still use this blog to lure new buyers. And I still don't associate with Realtors during my time away from work.
There were 7 single family homes sales in all of Key West during the month of May 2009. Two were short sales and one was a bank owned property at 910 United Street. I showed that house at least a dozen times. That place had huge locational and structural issues in my opinion. The house was sagging terribly on one side and had the misfortune of having one hell of a tree in the yard which may prevent any owner from ever putting in a pool to take advantage of the otherwise enormous lot. Oh, it's on a busy street to boot. It sold for $488,000 or $221 per sq ft. Another house located at 1300 Seminary Street (originally priced $1,869,000 in 2005 and sporadically reduced) sold for $1,035,000 (or $524 per sq ft)after just 27 days on the market when it was offered at $1,188,000.
The least expensive house to sell went for $270,000. The most expensive maxed out at only $1,100,000. (I had a buyer that submitted a higher all cash offer on that place last fall. The Seller should have taken the bird in the hand offer rather than wait for more money. I remember an email I sent to the listing Realtor warning about the cost of holding that property [monthly mortgage payments, utilities, pool maintenance, etc. which I estimated to be around $7000 per month]. My buyer bought something else in a better location at a better price.) The average price per sq ft on single family homes in all of Key West in May was $370. But readers need to be aware of the marked disparity of properties and locations. That price per sq ft is not proof of anything.
There were 14 condo and townhome sales during May. Two of those were shown as short sales. But 7 were bank owned properties. None of the remaining 5 sales was anything to write home about. So at least 64% of the sales that closed were problem properties. The least expensive unit sold for $110,250 and the most expensive only sold for $405,000. The average price per sq ft for units sold was a mere $261.
Here is some food for thoughtfor you bottom feeders: there are 110 properties single family properties shown as contingent or contract pending. Ten of the properties are already bank owned. Sixty-five of the houses are officially designated as short sales. Ten that I counted are bank owned. That means at least 68% of the single family homes in Key West currently under contact are distress sales. The positive spin on that number is that 110 properties are under contract. Not all will close. But I have to think a great number will. Consider the alternative. Is Countrywide or any other big lender prepared to own that many houses in Key West to get a better deal? The short sale contract between the short sale owner and the short sale buyer may not get accepted by the short sale lender, but I cannot accept the big national lenders wanting to absorb more bank owned properties.
There are 104 condos and townhomes shown as contingent or contract pending. Fifteen of those are already bank owned and 70 are designated as short sales. That means 82% of the condos and townhomes are officially distress properties. But there is some good news about a couple of the contingent properties. Two luxury units at Harbour Place went under contract in May, and neither is a distress sale. There is also a unit with a full transient rental license at Beach Club under contract, and it is not a distress sale either.
We are working our way through the inventory of available homes, condos and townhomes. The inventory is shrinking. I can't definitively state we are at the bottom of the downturn, but we must be pretty close.
If you want to buy your place in Paradise before the big one eludes you forever, CLICK HERE to search the Key West Association of Realtors mls database. Nobody will track your movement on the Internet and your personal information will not be collected by me. If you see a property that interests you, please call me, Gary Thomas, 305.766.2642 or e-mail me at kw1101v@aol.com. I am a full time Realtor at Preferred Properties Coastal Realty Inc. Our office is an affiliate of Christies Great Estates.
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Two-Fers on Peacon Lane - Old Town - Key West
There are two great houses on one of the best little lanes in Old Town Key West, Peacon Lane. Peacon Lane is only one block long and is situated between Elizabeth Street to the west and William to the east. It is a one way lane entered from Eaton Street and exits onto Caroline Street. The exit point delivers you right at the doorstep of the Historic Key West Seaport. Peacon Lane is a mix of a few large houses like the ones mentioned here today and several smaller cottages. Most of the houses have been gentrified but there are a couple of Conch and left-over hippie places as well. CLICK HERE to see one of my favorite Old Town houses that is located next to 315 Peacon Lane. And CLICK HERE to see the cottage on the otherside of 315 Peacon Lane. That's what makes lanes like this one so appealing. Diversity.
315 Peacon Lane is described by the listing Realtor this way:
"This Is A Must See To Believe! Beautifully Renovated Conch Home On Prestigious Peacon Lane. Open Floor Plan With Dade County Pine Walls And Floors Make Entertaining A Breeze. Large Designer Kitchen Featuring Granite Countertops, Stainless Sub-Zero Appliances, Wet Bar And Doors That Open To a Tropically Enclosed Garden Is To Die For! Three Bedrooms And Three Baths Including Master Suite With Large Walk-Out Balcony. Located On A Quiet, Quaint, One-Way Lane Yet Steps Away For The Waterfront, Shops, Restaurants, Duval Street. This is a potential short sale situation."CLICK HERE to see some great photos of the house and more detailed information. This property is offered at the current asking price of $2,150,000 or $792 per sq ft. This property has been on the market for 579 days (366 plus 213).
Right across the street you will find 316 Peacon Lane that was listed just last week. It is offered at $1,600,000 or $789 per sq ft. The listing Realtor describes 316 Peacone Lane thus:
"Beautiful historic 2 story home completely renovated including a new 2 story addition. Detailed craftsmanship is evident throughout this home with hand sanded Dade Co. pine walls, pine floors, crown molding and intricate tile work. The entrance foyer leads to a showplace kitchen and great room with two sets of French doors to the backyard with pool. Also on the first floor is a large guest bedroom with ensuite bath and a powder room. The second floor has a generous sized guest bedroom with ensuite bath and a large master suite with beamed cathedral ceiling, French doors to a small balcony, and master bath with double sinks, tub and separate shower. Best location - walk to the historic seaport, Duval St, restaurants and shops."CLICK HERE for more detailed information and photos of this great property. 316 Peacon Lane is not a short sale!
One of the things I really like about Old Town lanes is that most require that a person actually intends to go there. If you are zipping down Eaton Street in your car or scooter you will surely miss the only entrance unless you are looking for it. It comes and goes that quickly. The entrance is opposite the former Calvin Klein House on Eaton Street. Most people are so busy looking at that place that they miss Peacon Lane. I found THIS PHOTO of a friend, David Kaufelt, leading an expedition participants during the Key West Literary Seminar to explore Key West landmarks like the Calvin Klein House.
If you are looking for a large home in the Old Town area with character and location, please call me, Gary Thomas, at 305-766-2642 or e-mail me at kw1101v@aol.com to schedule a showing.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
708 Passover Lane - Old Town Key West - Short Sale
The neighbors across the street are very quiet. And you can rest assured the view from the front door of 708 Passover Lane will never change. Never Ever!
708 Passover Lane is located just across from the Key West Cemetery at one of the highest points in Old Town Key West. The house sits to the rear of an odd shaped lot of 3364 sq ft. There is off street parking and a landscaped front yard with obscured views of the cemetery. The house itself is an arts and crafts style structure that was built (county records) in 1938. It had a new roof in 2000. County building permits suggest most of the interior renovations and the pool and rear deck were done in 1992.
If you are one of those buyers who feels compelled to have a designer kitchen complete with granite, marble and stainless steel, this old house could be a candidate for a new re-do that will not break the bank. It simply isn't all that big a place. And it is perfectly livable as is. The present owner paid $840,000 for this house in 2005. But now the property is a short sale and is offered at the asking price of $525,000 or $746 per sq ft.
On the other hand, some strategic fairy dust and paint could go a long way to make this charmer "pop". CLICK HERE and look at the photo of the off street parking. Imagine how cute the same space could be if the fence surrounded the area and was painted bright white. Get rid of the pea rock and brick the driveway.Ditch the trash cans while you are at it. Yuck! Imagine your little Key West car sitting in the driveway. There is a nasty old stub of a long gone tree that needs to be removed. Reinstall the picket fence around the permiter of the entire property and paint it white. Voila. You also may want to remove the screen that encases the front porch. It is not necessary and hides the beauty of this charming cottage. A house a couple doors to the north (CLICK HERE)looks somewhat similar. So it may give you an idea of what I think 708 Passover might look like sans screened porch.
There are only eight houses on the block. CLICK HERE, and CLICK HERE. CLICK HERE to see the scary cemetery. You don't need to worry about the neighbors across the street making a ruckus and keeping you awake all night. You don't need to worry about their friends taking up all the parking spots on the street. Same for the other houses on Passover Lane. The properties are single family and there isn't a guesthouse, bar, restaurant or gallery within a couple of blocks.
This is how the listing realtor describes 708 Passover Lane: "Sequestered cottage in the heart of Old Town with brick patio, fencing, offstreet parking, high ceilings, wood floors and walls. Tented by Hammerhead 2/11/09." CLICK HERE to read more info from the listing Realtor and to see more photos.
Everything in Key West seems to be negotiable these days. Half of my readers won't consider this house because of the location. So that means less competition from potential buyers that do not mind tombs with a view as neighbors. I think a smart buyer will act on this.
Please contact me, Gary Thomas, 305.766.2642 or e-mail me at kw1101v@aol.com to arrange to see 708 Passover Lane. By the way, I recently sold the house next door at 8 Passover Lane. My buyers absolutely love it and the neighborhood.
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Friday, May 22, 2009
Fore! - Thought - Key West Golf Club
Forethought: "n. A thinking or planning beforehand; prescience; premeditation; forecast; provident care."
If you keep track of sales activity in Key West you may have noticed a flurry of activity in the past few weeks at the Key West Golf Club community. During the past couple of years there have been numerous foreclosures and related short sales that have driven down the asking and selling prices at the Key West Golf Club. I'm not reporting anything new. But the flurry of recent buying may be a signal we are at or near the bottom of the market, at least at the Golf Course.
CLICK HERE to view townhome sales at the Key West Golf Course over the past year. There was only one single family home sale (CLICK HERE) during the same time period. It sold for $735,500 in June 2008.
I also generated a report CLICK HERE of active listings for townhomes at the Golf Course. CLICK HERE to see a separate list for single family homes at the Golf Course. Try a Google Map search of the street address to get a better feel what the surrounding area looks like. Just like everywhere else on this planet, location means a lot. And in this instance, some "lots" are more valuable because of their location than others. Also, checkout the individual listings for photos of the interior and exterior. Asking price is not always a predictor of a good location or quality finishes of a townhome or single family home. Some townhomes and some single family homes have private pools. So you really need to view each listing separately.
My suggestion: use some forethought and consider buying a townhome or single family home at the Key West Golf Course community. Prices are low but demand may be rising. Get a good deal before the good deals are all gone.
If you see a property you like, please contact me, Gary Thomas, 305.766.2642 or e-mail me at kw1101v@aol.com. Let me help you find your place in Paradise. If you haven't been to the Golf Course in awhile, the view at the end of Golf Club Drive just as you enter The Sanctuary is absolutely beautiful. (I took the above photo last Friday.)
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Thursday, May 21, 2009
Her Dog Ate Her Homework & She Didn't Get the Memo!
One of the agents in my office has been working like a dog to sell a so-so property in a so-so location in Key West. The property is a short sale. The buyer and seller agreed to the price and my fellow agent has been shepherding the short sale through the Bank of America short sale service center.
A couple of days ago he received this e-missile from BofA:
"Hello,
I got the notes from customer service that you will not reduce the commission to 4%. I'm sorry but per our revised matrix this loan falls under the 4% commission. I am unable to give you anything more then that. We do not offer 6% commissions, the most we give out is 5% but this loan does not fall into that category. I'm very sorry, but please revise the HUD and send it in. If I don't receive it within 72 hours the correct way the file will be closed out for non compliance."
The average mls offer of compensation is 3% of the sales price to a buyer's agent. Sometimes the split is higher and sometimes it is lower. For the past few years many lenders have refused to pay the real estate commission offered in the mls offer of compensation and instead refused to approve short sales unless the commission was reduced to an amount lender was willing to pay.
The National Association of Realtors complained and in March 2009 Fannie Mae issued this directive to loan servicers (the companies that process loan payments and make decisions on the approval or disapproval of short sales):
Servicing Guide, Part VII, Section 504.02: Contacting Selected Borrowers
Effective March 1, 2009, closing of preforeclosure sales may not be conditioned upon a reduction of the total commission to be paid to real estate agents to a level below what was negotiated by the listing agent with the borrower, unless the fee exceeds 6 percent of the sales price of the property in aggregate. Servicers are reminded that they must continue to obtain any approvals that may be required by interested third parties in connection with preforeclosure sales.
Maybe the lady at BofA didn't get the memo that it is not okay to screw Realtors and threaten not to approve a short sale unless the Realtor take a cut of his commission so that BofA can repay the bank bailout money (and pay bonuses and retention payments to worthy employees). Or maybe BofA is so big that it doesn't have to obey any little policy.
I worked my rear end off last summer on a very difficult deal. Countrywide (now part of BofA) was the lender and it approved the short sale but only permitted a commission of $50,000 even though the earned commission was much higher. I've had similar situations with other lenders that demand Realtors share in the misery of a short sale by reducing their commission. The Fannie policy was supposed to address those wrongful practices and stop them.
I don't have a dog in the fight over my fellow agent's battle with BofA over the commission he earned but will not receive. But I know there are plenty of other agents that are experiencing the same treatment from BofA and other lenders every day. Some real smart trial lawyer is going to come along and create a class action lawsuit against the lenders and servicers that are violating the rules. I welcome that. In fact I have a lawyer I showed property to a few weeks ago that filed a very famous class action lawsuit. Are you reading this, Tom?
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
The Key West Bank Dick - Part Two
I've complained before that the Key West Association of Realtors mls database does not automatically show bank owned properties. Some Realtors believe that lender-owners do not want to disclose to the public that a bank owns a piece of property. I guess that is possible, but having worked in the Special Assets division of two banks, I know that we advertised we were selling bank foreclosures. There is a segment of the market that wants to buy bank foreclosures: they think they are going to get a deal. They have watched those late night infomercials on how to buy real estate in a down market.
I decided to do my best imitation of W.C. Fields as The Bank Dick and went through the mls database and found the properties CLICK HERE that are bank owned. These properties are primarily single family homes in Key West. A couple of the properties are very nice. So there may be a real bargain if you play your cards right. I suggest that you look at 3 Casa Roma Lane and 1710 Bahama Drive, both are water properties and are located in Key West.
If you are interested in MidTown CLICK HERE to see 1300 Ashby. It is a large house with 3 beds, 2 baths, on a large lot at only $309,000.
If you are looking for commercial property, CLICK HERE. There is a Duval Street Transient Licensed property ($4,300,000), a Stock Island multi-unit property (2,300,000), and a Key Largo commercial property ($3,300,000) that are each Bank Owned. Bank financing of these properties may be available.
Most of the bank owners periodically reduce the asking price on properties that do not sell. Some of these properties are getting stale. They have been on the market a long time and nobody wants them. A couple actually look pretty interesting. Checkout the list and if you see a property that you like, please call me, Gary Thomas, 305-766-2642 or e-mail me at kw1101v@aol.com. Let me be your Bank Dick and let's find a deal.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Half-Price in Key West
I've noticed several "For Sale By Owner" signs in the area near the gym I go to. One caught my eye the other day and I decided to share two photos with you. See above.
My purpose is not to try to find a buyer for this property or to dissuade anyone from looking at it. I will tell you this much: the asking price on this 1254 sq ft house that sits on a large 7830 sq ft lot (90' x 87') is now $750,000 or one half the original price of $1,500,000.
I just did a quick search of other houses listed for sale in the Old Town, the Meadows, and the Casa Marina areas that are priced up to $750,000. CLICK HERE to view the list. (I did some "heavy" editing. There were 82 houses in this price range.)
You will note that there are two houses on the list (529 Olivia and 726 Fleming) that have valuable transient rental licenses. I wrote earlier at 715 Ashe Street. I think it could be a great house for somebody who wants a small project house. 407 Catherine is adorable and the owner is looking to sell it. 706 Chapman Lane is as cute as a button and has room for a pool. 1016 James Street is an eyebrow house that needs total renovation, but it has an existing out building and a large backyard which means this could be a great project house if you get it for a good price. 618 Petronia Street has a huge rear yard which opens the property to potential development possibilities. 723 Southard Street is a real sleeping beauty. 825 Southard Street is a great big old place that needs total redo, but it has strong bones and great curb appeal.
1009 Watson Rear sits behind other houses located on Watson Street. You cannot see the property. So it is really hidden. Livable as is, but it is not a protected house so it can be demolished and a new house built on this incredible lot. Easy to show and worth looking at. The house next door at 1007 Watson is a short sale. I think we should look at both houses at the same time. Bring your imagination.
719 Windsor Lane is the former home of writer John Hersey and is located in the Writer's Compound. I wrote about this house last year. CLICK HERE. I've shown the property several times, mostly to writers want to soak in the atmosphere that populates this compound. The owner sold the small cottage I mentioned in my earlier blog. So it is now time to sell the main house.
If any of these properties appeals to you, please call me, Gary Thomas, 305-766-2642 to schedule a showing. I don't think a property has be offered at half price to be considered a good deal.
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Monday, May 18, 2009
The One that Got Away!
While searching for pics to help convey the sense of loss we feel when we realize we missed a great opportunity, I cam across a sad blog posting from a would-be buyer in The Hudson Valley. She said in part "THIS is the one that got away. This is the heartbreaker, the one I can’t stop thinking about, measuring all others against. “Another house will come along,” said the same person who told me there wasn’t anything on the North Fork of Long Island for under 300K. Well, there was, and it was a beaut, but I didn’t get there fast enough." CLICK HERE to read her lament in full.
I had a reader call me on Saturday. She wanted to see a house I mentioned here a while back. I called to set up a showing. It had gone under contract the prior afternoon and was not yet in the mls. Noteworthy? No. But more and more houses in the most desirable Key West locations are going under contract.
When I thought of the title "The One that Got Away!" I was thinking about houses, of course. I've had my share of properties I missed and regret some of them to this day. But don't fishermen lament the "big one" that got away? Don't lovers rue the one that got away? Don't athletes and fans alike cringe at the win that was lost by a fleet second? The ones that got away can haunt us all forever because we know that if we had only acted differently, the outcome (and maybe the rest of our lives) would be different and possibly better.
I did a quick search of the real Key West Association of Realtors mls database and found these properties CLICK HERE that went under contract since April 1, 2009. I know there are a lot of very savvy buyers that keep real good track of the status of our real estate inventory. They know how old and stale some listings have become. They know when a new property hits the mls sometimes more often than some Realtors. And they should appreciate the fact that the inventory of available properties is dwindling.
Here's my take on a couple of the houses in the list CLICK HERE: 711 Elizabeth was on the market forever and priced to high. New Realtor, new photos,new price, and it went under contract immediately. 1229 Florida offered forever until bank foreclosed; then new Realtor, new price and under contract over-night. 531 Olivia has been for sale "forever" and as luck would have it I had a buyer who wanted it the day after it went under contract. 1 Pinder Lane on the other hand was barely on the market for a day before it went under contract. The same is true for 1020 Southard, the Gingerbread man House (offered at $1,975,000). Under contract in one day. 929 United Street is one heck of an asking price at only $1,295,000. Somebody is getting one of the biggest deals of this market downturn. 1020 Von Phister is another sweet deal for an excellent house in an excellent location. I wrote earlier about 1209 White Street, a bank owned house for only $329,000. That house had already been partially redone and it had a huge side and rear yard awaiting a pool and garden. Another missed opportunity. And then there is the cute property at 811 Fleming where you could operate a little business and live up above like in the olden days. The house had room for a pool to boot. 1021 Johnson Street is another house that was listed and went under contract within a couple of days, asking price $1,995,000. That house was a bank foreclosure last year. Search my blog for it. Bought, fixed up, and put back on the market. And under contract right away. I told you folks it was a good deal last year. The big house on Noah Lane ($2,750,000) went under contract as well. So did the cute little cottage at 1018 Thompson Lane, also in my blog.
If you don't want to miss the opportunity to buy your place in Paradise before the number of available properties shrinks even more and prices start to rise (and they will), CLICK HERE to search the real Key West Association of Realtors mls database. No one will track your internet activity and no one will send you unsolicited emails. But if you see something you like, please consider contacting me, Gary Thomas, to assist you in buying a place in Paradise. You can find me at 305.766.2642 or email at kw1101v@aol.com.
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The information on this site is for discussion purposes only. Under no circumstances does this information constitute a recommendation to buy or sell securities, assets, real estate, or otherwise. Information has not been verified, is not guaranteed, and is subject to change.