July 12th, 2011 | Category News

SVN’s Jerry Anderson @ ICSC RECon 2011

GlobeSt.com’s Ian Ritter speaks with SVN Florida‘s Jerry Anderson at this years ICSC RECon show in Las Vegas. The big flow of distressed assets in the industry never took off, but that could change-

January 21st, 2011 | Category Articles

The Distressed Asset Trifecta

By Miguel de Arcos Originally posted at svnfloridablog.com

I recently found myself in the middle of the ultimate testament to the phrase “distressed sale” in today’s market. I call this situation the Distressed Asset Trifecta.

I was having a conversation on distressed assets with a bank President friend of mine. The discussion turned [...]

August 3rd, 2010 | Category News

Crazy Commercial Real Estate Market Endures

By Mark Alexander, CCIM
Originally at svnfloridablog.com

Many years from now our kids may read stories about the “Great Recession” of 2009 to 2010 (and counting).  With luck, they will only recall the ice cream being good and the beach being hot.  But the rest of us here in SW Florida won’t soon forget the things we see happening every day now…especially in the crazy commercial real estate market.  It is an amazing time to witness history being written. Many of us wish it just wasn’t so painful while others are happily securing their “Best Deals of a Lifetime”.

For example, a local SW Florida Bank just foreclosed on their $6.2 million mortgage for a brand new, never occupied Class A Industrial building (60,000 sf) on Alico Road in Ft. Myers that cost $7 million to build just two years ago…and it is now being offered for Sale at $2.7 million…and that is an Asking Price! I’m just getting started here.
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April 5th, 2010 | Category News

Tallahassee: Florida's 3rd Lowest Unemployment 8.6%

Being active in the commercial real estate brokerage arena in Northwest Florida, I was thrilled to read the statistics that Tallahassee has the third lowest unemployment rate in Florida.  Click here to read the full story on UrbanTallahassee.com.

Florida’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for February 2010 is 12.2 percent. This represents 1,126,000 [...]

November 19th, 2009 | Category Articles, News

SW Florida Commercial Real Estate Market Will Be Slow To Turn The Corner

By Mark Alexander, CCIM
Originally published at
SVN Florida

Thud! Did you hear that? It sounded like the Florida residential real estate market just hit bottom. Most cities across the country have reported a stabilization of average home prices and a number of cities have actually shown small increases. Stable home prices should help to more accurately value the toxic mortgage-backed securities which should help ease our battered banking industry.

It is nice to see these other cities apparently turning the corner in front of Fort Myers during these tough economic times. This can only mean it will be our turn soon, right? Hope is alive, but I fear that thud heard round the U.S might be a hollow knock on a false bottom as we tread water before diving for the real bottom.

If you look at the price of home sales closed each week in Southwest Florida, you may notice the vast majority of sales are between $50,000 and $250,000. It appears the lower end of the home sale market is dominating sales activity which naturally skews our average home prices downward.

But what about the high end of the residential market? I bumped into broker Trae Zipperer at the car wash last month. Trae got his MBA from Harvard and specializes in high-end waterfront home sales in Lee County.

He said his market is slow and asking prices have come down dramatically. Trae said homes that were selling between $800,000 and $900,000 just a few years ago are now being offered between $400,000 and $500,000. He said many wealthy homeowners also own commercial real estate which is pulling them down. Plus their local businesses are off 40 percent to 50 percent in some cases due to the economy. The problems of commercial real estate, with its high vacancies and lower market rental rates, coupled with the slow economy, may cause a small wave of higher-end residential foreclosures over the next six to 12 months. The wealthy have the resources to hold on longer than others, but even they can only go so long with negative cash flow from their businesses and negative cash flow from their commercial real estate holdings.
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