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Michael Landino
Agent
    Years of Experience: 8 years

    NAR-National Association of Realtors
    FAR-Florida Association of Realtors
    BEAR-Bonita Springs-Estero Association of Realtors
    Coldwell Banker Sterling Society

Direct: 239-248-9483

Office: 239-992-0059



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Coldwell Banker - Bonita Springs
8200 Health Center Blvd Ste 101
Bonita Springs, FL
239-992-0059


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Home Pricing

Bonita Springs Florida – As Snow Birds Fly North A Different Species Flies to Florida

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Lured by rock-bottom prices, international buyers are now flocking to buy Florida properties. It’s especially true in countries where the currency is strong against the dollar. Canadians are being told this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity – the perfect storm. The prices are just incredible and the Canadian dollar has been so strong.

At least three of five buyers in the Naples/Bonita Springs condo market are coming from abroad. The stampede from overseas is sort of like a foreign subsidy helping us resolve our real estate problems. This time the assistance isn’t coming from Washington but it’s coming from Caracas, London, Milan, Bogota. The buying frenzy was set off by developers lowering prices on new units to below what it costs to build in today’s market. There are many people on the sidelines watching for the floor and in the last three or four months there’s the perception that we’re there.

Most of the foreigners are cash buyers. Luxury condos are once again popular among Latin America buyers who purchase them as investments but also as a home base. While their children attend school here, they attend to business interests or escape strife at home. And these days average Joe Canadian can afford much more. For decades the U.S. dollar was worth more than the Canadian dollar and buying in the U.S. was always more expensive for Canadians. But in September 2007, the Canadian dollar reached parity with the greenback for the first time in 31 years. It fell back again, but now the Canadian loonie, which takes its name from the loon pictured on the one-dollar coin, is near parity at around 95 cents. Most of his Canadian buyers are “end-vestors,” meaning they plan on renting a unit out for now with an eye toward using it themselves down the road.

Methodologies Used to Determine a Home’s Sale Price

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Arriving at an ideal sale price is hardly an outcome of guesswork by a real estate agent. Skilled agents recommend purchase or sales prices only after a carefully considered review of the property’s condition, location, structure, amenities, and functionality, all in conjunction with the real estate that has sold and is currently on the market. 

The best agents follow a structured process as they evaluate properties and render pricing opinions, systematically balancing the features and benefits of the home against the attributes of competing homes, recently sold homes, and homes that have been sold in the recent past.

The real estate world relies on three basic approaches to property valuation:

-Appraisal. The vast majority of prospective property purchasers seek financing from a bank or financial institution. These financial entities require an appraisal in order to certify the value of the purchased property and to ensure that the funds being lent cover a certain percentage of the real value of the property as assessed by an impartial third party and not a percentage of some pulled out of the air figure set by an aggressive Seller or agent. An appraisal analyzes and documents the condition and attributes of a property and analyzes its value through a process that usually involves comparing the property with sales of comparable properties in the Bonita Springs area.

-Broker price opinion (BPO). A BPO is a property value assessment, which is required by banks selling  foreclosure properties (known as REO properties). Each bank has its own BPO form and process to complete, but nearly all aim to achieve the same objective: To understand the value of the foreclosed property, the likely sales time frame, and the probability of a sale at a certain price.

-Competitive market analysis (CMA). While appraisals come into play in most real estate deals, and BPOs come into play some real estate deals, competitive market analyses are fundamental to all professionally realtor listed real estate deals.

CMA is shorthand for competitive market analysis, a market review that studies the prices of sold properties, pending sales, and active and expired listings to arrive at the current fair market value for a given property.

The key word in the CMA definition, and in fact in any valuation, is “current.” Whether a property is analyzed or interpreted using a CMA, a broker price opinion, or a third-party appraisal, its assessing the today’s value of the property.

Every time a CMA is used to advise a Seller or Buyer on price,  that evaluation is based on today’s market conditions and today’s market timing, and that many factors could influence the value assessment either positively or negatively in the future.

Bonita Springs-Are you Winning the Real Estate Limbo Dance?

Friday, March 19th, 2010

When most homeowners decide to put their house on the market they usually obtain a price opinion from one or more real estate agents in the area. The agents job is to evaluate what comparable properties have sold in the past six month and make adjustments to those properties for features such a square footage differences, in-ground pool, number of garages and so forth. The same type of adjustments are made for comparable properties that are currently for sale on the market and a recommended listing price is determined.

All too often the homeowner will make the mistake of not listening to the price opinion of the agents and select a price that is too high for this declining market. As the months go by and the property does not sell or even get an offer, the homeowner will start to lower the selling price. In the Bonita Springs area of southwest Florida the selling price of properties is still declining at a rate of about one to two percent per month. So even though the selling price is lowered, it is still relatively high because the market price has also declined. Until the homeowner decides to lower the price to the market level or gets lucky with a buyer who just has to have that home, the property will not sell. This is what I call the real estate limbo dance. Until the selling price is at or under the market price (the limbo stick) the homeowner will not sell the home and win the dance.

Also, homeowners often forget the cost to carry the home during the time it does not sell. The cost to carry includes expenses such as real estate taxes, utility bills, homeowner association dues, etc. So price the house at market from the start and win the real estate limbo dance!

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: 379,000

  • Avg. Days on Market: 69

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