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MIAMI - If Miami has become one of the hot centers of
America’s real estate gold rush, Mark Zilbert is its latest
cowboy.
A nationally recognized authority on
residential real estate, Zilbert has just launched CondoFlip.com
— a Web site that makes it easy for anyone, anywhere to get into
the hot business of “flipping” condominium units, many of them
sight unseen (flipping refers to the practice of buying a
property and immediately reselling it on a rising market.)
Registration on Zilbert’s site is free
— he makes money just like other real estate brokers by taking a
commission when a transaction is made. He argues that his Web
site will reduce condo inventory in the Miami area quickly and
efficiently by bringing together buyers and sellers.
“What I decided to do was build this
technology ... basically, a marketplace that lets buyers around
the world see what’s on the resale market in Miami and give them
the opportunity to buy condos without having to actually make
the trip here,” he said.
But with an estimated 80 percent of all
Miami condo buyers considered speculators and as many as 70,000
units planned for construction in the Miami area, local real
estate expert Jack McCabe of McCabe Research and Consulting
smells a bubble.
“I think we have an oversupply of new
condominium units where we are going to see severe downward
pricing pressures in the next few years,” said McCabe.
Zilbert says he isn’t aiding and
abetting a housing bubble.
“The technology and the business
process I have put together are not designed to encourage people
to buy properties to flip,” said Zilbert. “They’re designed to
address those people who have already purchased.”
Zilbert’s not the only person trying to
take advantage of the white-hot housing market — a market that
has seen real estate values go up an astonishing 85 percent
since 2001.
U.S. Condo Exchange, another recently
launched real estate Web site, bills itself as real estate’s
version of Ebay. The Web site is more than a listing service —
you can purchase a condo online — and it already has a handful
of listings. It costs $150 a month to post properties on the
site.
U.S. Condo Exchange CEO Richard
Swerdlow, a real estate developer, says the Web site was
designed as a transparent marketplace where buyers, sellers,
brokers and developers can transact business. And it will work
no matter what the housing market does.
“In a good market we’ve got buyers and
sellers transacting, and in a bad market you actually have
financial institutions that may have properties that they have
to liquidate,” he said.
U.S. Condo Exchange has at least one
new member: Phil Speigelman, CEO of International Sales Group
and a 36-year real estate veteran and a broker for some of
Miami’s biggest condo projects who says the site is a great way
to market his units.
“We are constantly looking for new ways
to reach the public,” Speigelman said. “We are prospecting for
gold, except we are really prospecting for people.”
And even as many in Miami concede that
the boom may not go on forever, those expecting to strike gold
in real estate, like Mark Zilbert, say the real estate market
still has a long way to go.
“My prediction is we’re going to have
the flavor of a Chicago waterfront residential city with the
excitement of Las Vegas,” Zilbert said. “We don’t have gambling,
but downtown Miami will become an all-night city.”
Article Source:
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8345285/
By Scott Wapner
Reporter
CNBC
Updated: 5:03 p.m. ET June 24, 2005
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