Harbor Condominium treasurer Juan Llorente, Blanca CRE EVP Cary Cohen and MSP Group CEO Deme Mekras speak to Fox News Digital about how they all came to a buyout deal of the North Bay Village, 29-unit, waterfront building.
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Florida condo owners try to ‘anticipate the inevitable’ by approaching brokers for buyouts |
"The Harbor Condominium is unique in its positioning. Of course, it starts with a waterfront location in an enclave that's really experiencing a renaissance of redevelopment," MSP Group CEO Deme Mekras also told Fox News Digital. "They don't make any more waterfront property, and the Harbor Condominium is sitting on just over a half an acre of land with some zoning that affords a developer to build a pretty significant boutique condo tower with luxury units as the end destination for this site."
While developers initially sought out
older condominium buyouts after the passage of Florida’s Condo 3.0 bill,
Harbor Condominium is now part of a growing trend of condo boards and their
owners approaching brokers for buyouts.
Passed by Gov. Ron DeSantis in early 2024, less than three years after the
Champlain Towers South collapse in Surfside, the bill introduced sweeping
reforms, from how buildings are maintained to how condominium associations
are governed. The state’s oldest structures and their residents are likely
to face the most costly upcoming assessments.
"It's critical to mention really what those changes in what the associations
are responsible for," Blanca Executive Vice President Cary Cohen told Fox
News Digital. "Post the tragedy of Surfside and now with the new
regulations, associations have to fully fund reserves. In addition to fully
funding their reserves, they have to satisfy the structural integrity
reserve study."
"The reality is that not every unit owner is selling strictly for financial
reasons," he continued. "A lot of this is a transaction born in case of
need. … There [are] fixed-income residents who own the unit and are facing
condo fees that have tripled."
Llorente emphasized that the decision to list came directly from the owners
themselves, driven by "a little bit of everything," from finances and
regulation to simple realism.
"Most importantly, in the past few years… the constant increase of insurance
and the cost of living, the maintenance in general since our property's
waterfront, all those just make it extremely harder for our community to
keep maintenance and keep up with all the city regulations," he said.
"What the board decided to do is create a sales committee with some of the
owners that have been there for decades… We interviewed [firms] one by one,
we [sat] down with them and ask[ed] them to explain the whole process, the
whole situation. And after this screen[ing], we decided to choose Blanca and
MSP Group as the one that we want to represent us on the market," Llorente
expanded. "They're very straightforward. They explained in detail the
step-by-step of the whole process. And we are extremely happy so far with
the job that they've done."
Cohen said the "key" is transparency.
"Transparency between us and the unit owners," Cohen said. "We are seller
representatives. We don't work for developers. We work for the individual
owners in positioning their property in the best way in the marketplace, and
that's our motto."
"While we are seller representatives, and we do represent the best interest
of the unit owners, that's coming from the vantage point of having a pretty
deep knowledge of how development works," Mekras added. "We can understand
what makes an opportunity for a developer, where the risks are, how to
mitigate them … and communicate that effectively to the community."
Collective unit sales can yield far more for owners than individual
listings, with Cohen arguing that the return on investment is three to five
times higher. MSP Group also said they have closed more than 15 condo
termination deals like the one with Harbor Condominium.
"When the condo unit owners were able to see our track record, it also made
them feel comfortable that we're going to be able to get the transaction
closed," MSP’s senior investment associate Sam Mekras said.
However, the real estate experts cautioned that not all older residential
buildings qualify for gold-mine status.
"Not every condo owner in an aging property is so fortunate because some of
the recipe for success is much like the Harbor site. We have what we would
call a low-density site. It's only a two-story project with 29 units on just
over a half an acre … that affords a robust redevelopment," MSP’s CEO noted.
"A westerly, landlocked community that doesn't have the redeveloping
potential, then those condo owners aren't necessarily going to be so
fortunate."
Looking at life after the eventual sale, excitement meets some anxiety as
Llorente points out the residents’ reactions are a mix of optimism,
curiosity and concern about displacement. Some owners are native Floridians,
while others hail from South America, Italy, Australia and elsewhere — most
of whom plan to remain in the Sunshine State.
"Some of the older owners that have been there for decades, they have a
little anxiety," Llorente said. "Mainly, we just keep the communication
fluent, and we just contact them when we have any news or updates. … And
some, they're extremely excited about cash[ing] out. … But I think the most
important thing here is to understand the reason and why we are going to the
market."
