Rising Condo Inventory: A Problem in Tampa Housing Market
Condos For Sale.
The loud signs flaunted from street corners across the Bay area are meant to grab the attention of potential Florida mortgage borrowers.
Developers advertise slashed prices and promise flat-screen TVs and computers. They put up inflatable gorillas and even pay people to dress as superheroes at busy intersections.
All the hype hasn’t worked.
The white-hot trend to change apartments into Florida condominiums has long passed, and developers that overestimated the demand have found themselves with half-empty complexes. Some that tried converting them back into apartments are grappling with foreclosure. Others are turning in their keys, leaving the lenders with unwanted residential properties they’re trying to sell themselves.
For individual Florida home mortgage loan applicants who purchased condominium units, they now must deal with uncertain property values and a less-than-promised quality of life: living in the middle of a sparsely filled complex where the majority of their neighbors rent.
Eddie Flom, who has worked with developers on conversion projects in the Tampa Bay housing market, sums up the situation in one word: greed.
“It’s the oldest thing in the American economy,” said Flom, of Flom Equities LLC. “Greed, greed, greed overcomes wisdom.”
Apartment-to-condominium conversions started locally in the late 1990s and heated up in late 2004 as some developers saw a way to get around high land costs and offer more affordable homes. Units at some apartment complexes, particularly the higher-end ones, sold out quickly.
A handful of developers made so much money, Flom said, that others took notice and jumped onboard. Some of the less experienced developers paid too much for the land and couldn’t sell condos for enough to make a profit. “People were trying to make a quick buck off the boom,” he said. “Now Tampa is in complete saturation mode.”
By 2005, the conversions led to a shortage of apartments as 18,000 rental units were turned into condos, and the occupancy rate at the remaining apartment complexes swelled to 98 percent, according to commercial real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield.
During the same year, 68 apartment complexes were purchased for conversion in the Bay area, up from 11 in 2004, according to New York-based Real Capitol Analytics, which tracks real estate trends. The conversion craze dropped off just as quickly as it heated up. In 2006, 25 complexes were sold for conversion. So far this year, there have been zero. The demand for Florida mortgage loans just isn’t there.
“It’s going to take at least a couple of years to burn off all the supply we have,” said Dan Fasulo, a company spokesman.
Some Lenders in a Jam
Developers aren’t the only ones feeling the pain. In some cases, Florida mortgage lenders are on the hook for loans on complexes where sales have been slim.
At CrossWynde Condominiums, an apartment conversion on U.S. 301 near Brandon, 60 percent of the 453 units are owned by the lender, Mountain Funding LLC of Charlotte, N.C., according to county property records.
The developer, Boca Raton-based Bay Communities, bought the complex and one other in Tampa, The Hamptons at Tampa Palms. Sales were slow, and the developer tried to lease the unsold units. In December, as both complexes headed toward foreclosure, Bay Communities sold them back to the lender for the mortgage amount.
Arthur Nevid, managing director for Mountain Funding, said the lender plans to hold the complex until the Florida housing market turns around. In the meantime, he said, it has hired a marketing and sales team to sell what it can and lease the rest.
“The market was real hot, and then it hit a wall very quickly,” Nevid said. “Two years ago you’d sell 10 units in a day. Now if you sell 10 in a month you’ve had a good month.”
Sales are picking up some, though, he said, citing 13 purchases at CrossWynde in the past three weeks. Nevid said his company, a private lender, is in a good position to hang on to the properties because it has real estate experience. Traditional banks, he said, are more likely to auction off failed conversions.
In Pinellas County, lenders have begun foreclosure on three complexes purchased for conversion, Seaside Villas, Shore Club Pasadena and South Pasadena.
The developers planned to remodel the waterfront complexes and even have pending contracts from some buyers. Construction at all three complexes has halted.
Wachovia Investment Holdings LLC and Fremont Investment & Loan claim the developers defaulted on $90 million in Florida mortgages.
It’s difficult to pinpoint how many apartment-to-condominium conversion complexes have gone into foreclosure because public records classify complexes as either “condominium” or “apartment” and don’t show which condos used to be apartments.
Mike Kane, chief executive of ForeclosuresDaily.com, said his company’s data show hefty foreclosure increases for apartment complexes.
In January, there were 286 apartment complexes in foreclosure, up 267 percent from 78 in January 2006.
SOURCE: The Tampa Tribune

May 17th, 2007 at 11:50 am
Is there any information available with regard to numbers or percentages of condo contracts buyers are walking away from?