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May 6th, 2008 categories: Tampa Condos, New Projects (Condos), Channelside Market Updates, Downtown Tampa
If you happen to be looking for a 1/1 condo in the downtown Tampa area, guess what? You’ve got 89 from which to choose. And there have been 23 sales of the same year to date, the majority at Skypoint (13). Island Place, on Harbour Island, comes in a distant second with 4 sales year-to-date. So how are prices for downtown Tampa condos? Those 89 condos, as you can see in the adjacent chart, are priced widely between $159k and $472.5k. But the median price, the split where there are an equal number of higher and lower priced units, is right at $260k. Examples of units priced around the median?:
On the low end is an 820sqft unit at Grand Central on Kennedy at $159k, but this is a short sale listing (phantom list price) so time will only tell if this price would be approved. But you can get a unit at The Place at Channelside for $159.9k. And on the high end of the pricing spectrum are 3 units at Grand Central at Kennedy. Priced in the mid $400s, these 1127sqft units are in the west building, with the floor to ceiling glass walls providing views of downtown and southward.
As for what’s sold in 2008, The chart shows that the median sale price is around $200k, or about $60k lower than the median list price currently. There have only been 4 sales of 1/1s YTD of over $250k. Of the 89 1/1s for sale, 52 of them are priced at or above $250k. So it’s clear to see that the current demand is at the lower end.
Data used is from the Mid-Florida Regional MLS and does not include private, non-brokered sales or condos for sale.
May 1st, 2008 categories: Tampa Real Estate, Tampa Market Conditions, Short Sale Information
With the abundance of pre-foreclosure and bank-owned properties in Tampa currently, one has to wonder when this process will peak and subside. And while some areas have been relatively free of distressed sales, others areas are hotbeds. I see the headlines, follow the market, and I’m in the business. But there’s nothing like hard numbers to get a clear picture of what’s transpired in the last 12 months with regard to foreclosure filings. So with that in mind I recently took a look at the Lis Pendens filings in Hillsborough County for the last 12 months. The results are displayed in the chart.
A Lis Pendens is a notice of some legal action against the property owner. These are recorded with the Hillsborough County Clerk of Court, and the overwhelming majority of these notices relates to a foreclosure on a mortgage. The typical language reads:
You are notified of the institution of this action by Plaintiff against you seeking to foreclose a mortgage encumbering the following real property in Hillsborough County, Florida:…
And with the decline in property values, the slowing economy, and the many risky mortgages resetting to higher interest rates (and much higher payments), foreclosures have certainly been on the rise. Starting in September of 2007, there was a steep rise in the number of Lis Pendens filings. But in recent months, the number of filings has seemed to stabilize, at a high rate. So what will the coming months bring? Will we begin to see a decline in the number of foreclosure filings? I’ll take another look next month and update the chart.
 
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