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Cape Coral's real estate collapse attracts bargain hunters

By Susan Taylor Martin, Times Senior Correspondent
In print: Monday, August 4, 2008


Janet Kenyon and her mother, Renate Schotsch, check out a $103,000, bank-owned home in Cape Coral.
Janet Kenyon and her mother, Renate Schotsch, check out a $103,000, bank-owned home in Cape Coral.
[SUSAN TAYLOR MARTIN | Times]
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CAPE CORAL

As the minibus swings into the driveway, Janet Kenyon takes one look at the new three-bedroom, two-bath house and lets out a shriek. "Oh, my God. I hate yellow!'' The house is indeed very yellow, but the hour is getting late and Kenyon and husband Blu have yet to see any place they really, really like. So they head inside to a pleasant surprise. "Aw, this is nice,'' she coos, stroking the faux granite countertops. "Sweet, isn't it?'' he agrees, exploring a custom walk-in closet. Best of all, the price: $103,000.

Three years ago, a house like this might have gone for $250,000 as investors swooped into Cape Coral and transformed the sleepy waterfront city into one of the country's hottest real estate markets. Then demand dried up, and by February, the Cape Coral-Fort Myers area had a new distinction: No. 1 in the nation in foreclosures.

The area is still Florida's foreclosure capital, though it has dropped to fourth nationally. Sales are up as cut-rate prices attract buyers like the Kenyons, who are moving from Connecticut to be close to Janet Kenyon's parents in nearby Estero.

Cape Coral is once again affordable, but with such a plunge in taxable value that the city of 170,000 is laying off dozens of employees and cutting park programs and other services.

And with nearly 11,000 homes in foreclosure — 1 in every 31 households — it could be two years before all the distressed properties find buyers.

"There's always a wisdom in maintaining a sense of cautious optimism,'' said City Manager Terry Stewart. "You obviously don't want to go off the deep end and say some of the positive things you see happening are absolutely going to continue.''

'Feeding frenzy'

Cape Coral is one of Florida's youngest cities, the creation of brothers Jack and Leonard Rosen. In 1957, they paid $678,000 for Redfish Point, renamed it and began building their "affordable waterfront wonderland'' across the Caloosahatchee River from Fort Myers.

What Cape Coral may lack in historical charm, it makes up for in size and location. At 115 square miles, it is the third biggest city geographically in Florida, trailing only Jacksonville and Tampa. Even today, 50 percent of the land is undeveloped, giving parts of Cape Coral the look of a windswept Kansas prairie.

Among the city's selling points are 400 miles of canals, many with direct access to the Gulf of Mexico. That, along with cheaper housing prices than those in the Tampa Bay area or South Florida, attracted hordes of speculators as loose lending standards and low "teaser'' interest rates fueled a nationwide real estate boom starting in 2004.

"It was a feeding frenzy,'' recalls Suzanne Sherer, an agent for RE/MAX in Cape Coral. "People were flipping properties right and left. You'd see some homes in bidding wars the minute the sign went up.''

Teachers, police officers and others who had made Cape Coral a bedroom community of Fort Myers were priced out of the market as the average sale price soared to $309,000 in 2006. Then the inevitable happened.

"Prices didn't make sense anymore,'' Sherer said. "Anytime a market is driven solely by investors, it can't sustain itself.''

In March 2005, the city issued 848 permits for new single-family homes. This March, it issued nine.

Word spreads abroad

Somewhat surprisingly, commercial development has remained fairly strong even as home building tanked. Once ignored by national chains that instead focused on Fort Myers, Cape Coral has recently landed its own Lowe's, Target, Carrabba's, a Kohl's department store and Starbucks.

City officials see that as a sign of the cape's long-term appeal.

"Even at the peak, we were undervalued in comparison to many other places in the state, and a lot of those places are pretty much built out,'' said Stewart, the city manager. "Cape Coral still has great opportunities not only for developing but for baby boomers coming to retire.''

To reduce inventory and jump-start the market, prices on builder- and bank-owned homes have been slashed. The strategy appears to be working: Adams Homes sold 55 new four-bedroom houses in June for as little as $128,900 and may start building again soon.

Such deals are especially enticing to Europeans, whose strong euro makes a $128,000 home cost the equivalent of $82,000. Word of foreclosure-driven bargains has spread so far that a German TV crew was recently in town to make a documentary.

Package deal

As foreclosures peaked in January, Marc Joseph Realty Inc. bought a 12-seat minibus wrapped in a green sign: Foreclosure Tours R US. Weekend tours of bank-owned homes for sale are so popular that all 12 seats are often taken.

"We realized that this is where our business would be,'' said Bill Mitchell, an agent who showed 14 houses to the Kenyons on a recent day.

Blu Kenyon, of Waterbury, Conn., has a freight delivery business so he likes Cape Coral's proximity to Interstate 75 and Southwest Florida International Airport. But the couple decided not to buy one house in Cape Coral.

Instead, they decided to buy three. Among them: an 1,800-square-foot home built two years ago for $314,500.

Today's price: $99,000.

Contact Susan Taylor Martin at susan@sptimes.com.



[Last modified: Aug 09, 2008 09:29 PM]



Comments on this article
by Suzy Aug 9, 2008 9:29 PM
I know of one German businessmen who wash their stolen money in Cape Coral. In Germany, he and his family belong to the lowes class. I fear that Cape Coral will be filled with low life Germans, who bring racism with themselves.
by yvonne Aug 8, 2008 8:24 PM
greedy investors greedy lenders and the city with high price sewer and water. insurance rates all of it has destroyed the city and the people who wanted to stay in their homes. greed is still happening and taking over.
by Cathy Aug 8, 2008 7:53 PM
We made 115 thousand on our house when we moved up here 2 years ago. we bought when it was low 2 years before that and sold high. I can beleive the investors ruined it. It has happened here too. And its a shame CC was a great place to live.
by teri Aug 8, 2008 7:50 PM
thanks to our greedy government, they are taxing americans out of their homes.now foreigners can come in and buy up all our properties. they don't need guns to take over our country. when will our government be for the people and help our interests.
by MIKE Aug 7, 2008 12:11 PM
SHREWD PURCHASES Y'ALL! NOW WAIT 'TIL YOU GET THEM TAX BILLS!
by Dean Aug 7, 2008 12:09 PM
I grew up in Pinellas in the 1960s-1980s. Saw what a mess it was becoming and moved north. I kept telling my family to get out while they could. Overpriced, over taxed and over crowded. Oh, I guess the hot weather makes it all worth it....
by mom Aug 6, 2008 3:40 PM
LETS MAKE FLORIDA LIKE IT USE TO BE...DROP THE TAXES & INS MAKE ALL THE BABY BOOMERS MOVE BACK DOWN HERE TO THIS PARADISE, AND GET THIS ECONOMY GOING ONCE AGAIN. TAKE A LOSS FOR A PROFIT!!!!!
by john Aug 6, 2008 9:01 AM
Real estate collapse is bound to happen statewide if taxes and insurance rates don't decrease. My insurance rates are higher than my mortgage peyment ever was (we own the home outright now.) We're making it but I don't see how young people can.
by Jim Aug 6, 2008 9:01 AM
Three houses in Cape Coral? 3X the boredom, property taxes and insurance. No jobs, Lee County unemployment at 5.7%,no parking on beaches, new bridge to Sanibel $6.00 toll. Have fun! Ha!
by tricia Aug 6, 2008 9:01 AM
You folks might have the most empty homes,but the problem is all over. I feel bad for those who paid inflated prices for their homes,coupled with adjustable rate mortgages,what were they thinking? Add on the high cost of heating,$4.25/Gallon fuel oil
by Sidekick Aug 5, 2008 7:34 PM
What a bunch of boneheads! I live in CC, and we have trees, great waterfront properties, low crime, & great place to live. Speculators came here because people came here. a hosue is an investment you live in, not a guarantee on making money! Get real
by rascaloke Aug 5, 2008 3:42 PM
do the prices reflect unpaid assesments/back taxes? probably not
by Jeff Aug 5, 2008 3:08 PM
Its a combination of banks turning their heads, flippers, unscrupulous elected officials, and make no mistake, the realtors did their part also. Was a nice place to live!!
by Patty Aug 5, 2008 2:05 PM
Pinellas is in big trouble - no fair and equitable real estate tax plan (portablity is a joke and a drain on the economy) and home owners insurance is unaffordable for most people. When is this going to be fixed? We need new leadership.
by Clint Aug 5, 2008 2:01 PM
Cape Coral may be the worst place to live on earth. Nothing but crappy, ugly houses. No character. No real community. And for all you tax whiners: Florida has LOW tax rates compared with every other state exept the crappy southern ones nobody likes
by Slow Joe Aug 5, 2008 11:23 AM
"Foreclosure Tours R US"?!?! So what, we're tourist attractions now? "Okay, ladies and gentlemen, don't feed them. They'll just keep begging us for more food."
by Dave Aug 5, 2008 11:23 AM
Buyer be ware! During the boom those homes were thrown up fast and cheap. Inspectors were too busy and builders didn?t know or care about adhering to building codes. I don?t want to see what happens when another hurricane rolls through that area.
by F. Quepeeps Aug 5, 2008 11:23 AM
This very good time to be real estate. You americans fools. We take over. Thank you very much.
by Patrick Aug 5, 2008 11:23 AM
The whole state is looking more more like this. I doubt that it will ever be the boom of yesteryear. Too many factors have changed. Adapt or move to greener pastures is what I say!
by Mike Aug 5, 2008 11:23 AM
Maybe when folks don't let greed get to them, this would not happen. Greed in both sellers and the fat tax collectors. The glut is over and prices are going where they SHOULD BE, not this inflated nonsence. How many people buy houses just to live in?
by irene Aug 4, 2008 8:46 PM
When My dad past away 2 years ago We thought we would do well in selling his home at 625,000.00 but last year we had taken a big dive and had sold it for less then half the price . With six childrens my dad had it really hurt all of us.
by George Aug 4, 2008 8:44 PM
I believe that part of the reason for the problems CC has now is not just the economy but the assessments and property taxes that they've raised. My taxes on vacant property went from $1500 per year to $23,000.00 along with assessments of $50,000.
by jos Aug 4, 2008 8:43 PM
I can't tell what geographical areas the figures concerning the number of foreclosures and rates relate to. It bounces around.
by David Aug 4, 2008 3:07 PM
Keep dropping in price because I'm still looking.
by Bob Aug 4, 2008 2:56 PM
Greedy people get what they deserve-nothing! If something sounds too good there is a catch. Caveat emptor-most found this out the stupid way.
by PJ Aug 4, 2008 2:56 PM
America, Germany's K-Mart. Let's pat ourselves on the back.
by Monty Aug 4, 2008 2:53 PM
Nce until the arithmetic tripped me up. 11,000 homes in foreclosure, 1-in-31 homes in foreclosure. That's 11000x31 or 341,000 total homes. But only 170,000 live there. That's a lot of speculation and second homes!! Good riddance.
by Scott Aug 4, 2008 2:53 PM
Keep in mind, much of Tampa can find itself in exactly this sor tof jam if we let developers run ramshod/
by Stefan Aug 4, 2008 2:53 PM
"Europeans, whose strong euro makes a $128,000 home cost the equivalent of $82,000." From your "Senior Corespondent" ? Senior or senile ? Come on, Susan, I know it's only Florida and not Paris, but they still pay you, so deliver quality, not trash.
by LDH Aug 4, 2008 2:43 PM
So the flipping begins once again. Greed is what has driven this community and many others under.
by John Aug 4, 2008 2:43 PM
Don't let the City of Cape Coral's administration fool you. They had the opportunity to control the bubble by limiting or slowing down permit approval. They chose the money over affordability for its residents. The mayor and his administration failed
by Allen Aug 4, 2008 2:33 PM
Pinellas and North Hills are next. The blue collar fundementals in our economy will be hit HARD in the coming recession. Along with our regressive property tax system and ins. problems -junking up our housing market- STAND BY!
by Chewy Aug 4, 2008 2:32 PM
No business and industry and phenominal growth. No wonder why the phenominal crash. Seems like lots of fraud and flipping going on constantly there.
by Mac Aug 4, 2008 2:31 PM
Great. Now Florida is going to be swamped with folks looking for $300,000 houses for $100,000.
by Lisa Aug 4, 2008 2:26 PM
Oh here goes those darn investors again..what is this guy gonna get blamed for? I mean he bought 3 homes..afterall, if the investors get credit for screwing up the market will the media give them credit for its comeback???
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