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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 2:42 pm 
Masters Degree in Mongering!
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Location: San Jose / MKE
If interested I have a friend who has one for sale plus
he'll throw in a bridge on the main highway between Jaco & Quepos for half price !! :roll:
Peace?
PIDD

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Buyers of stalled condos worry about down payment

By the A.M. Costa Rica staff


The nation's real estate market is grinding to another crisis as developers find they are unable to perform on their promises.

In beach towns and in the Central Valley condo buyers gave money to developers as down payments in anticipation that a building would be erected. Now many structures do not exist or stand unfinished, and the buyer's legal problems are just beginning.

The basic problem is that many developers used the down payments to finance construction. Local banks have frozen lending, so even the strongest developer may find it cannot complete the job.

Some buyers were under the impression that their money would be held in trust. In the United States strong trust laws protect buyers and hold the funds until the finished product is delivered. Not so in Costa Rica.

Some buyers gave their money to Stewart Title. That was the case with a Jacó woman, Gretchen Gary, who said she put a $21,000 deposit on a condo there. Thursday the title company manager, Esteban Rodriguez Varela, told her the company had disbursed the money to the developer when the sales agreement was signed. That is what the contract said and that is what the title company did, he added in an e-mail. He could not be contacted by a reporter.

Another buyer put up $78,000 for an as-yet unfinished penthouse condo, said the woman. Sales prices ranged from $189,900 to $749,900, she said.

In Escazú some buyers are suing a developer, but they found that the entire project is covered by a first mortgage that has priority over their deposit money.

Elsewhere unhappy would-be buyers are finding that banks have first position with a construction mortgage.

The problem is not restricted to condos. Paragon Properties sold many lots to North Americans via an aggressive telephone and mail campaign. Buyers took a trip to Costa Rica, signed sales agreements and paid part of the purchase price.

A typical Paragon contract requires additional payments every several years and that the purchaser begins construction within a stipulated period.

There is nothing illegal with the contract, except that the world financial situation has changed so that buyers who were planning for an early retirement may now have lost much of their money in the stock market downturn. Paragon executives were not available Thursday to assess the extent of the problem. Other firms that sold vacant land have similar contracts.

Ms. Gary, who is in the real estate business, was quick to point out that many developers who canceled their projects did refund down payments to buyers. Others allowed buyers to obtain property in another development. She named Vista CR and DayStar, a former employer, as two firms that have kept their promises.

For Arcelio Hernández Mussio, a lawyer in Jacó with wide knowledge in real estate, major developers cannot afford to cheat customers because of the damage such actions would do to their reputations. He said he thinks most developers will come to some agreement with those who put down deposits.

Others may allow buyers to accept property in another project, he said.

Of course, some start-up firms that may have been under capitalized to begin with might not have a choice, and principals many not even be still in the area. The firms find themselves unable to make more sales or to borrow construction money to raise cash to finish the whole project


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 2:59 pm 
PHD From Del Rey University!
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A friend of mine and his brother lost about $10,000 each down payment on a condo they went in on in about 2006 I think. It was before this financial crisis, and I think that was probably just a scam. They took deposits and then said that they couldn't get building permits but the money was already spent on building materials, blah blah blah.

I advised not to do it right from the start but some people need to learn the hard way.


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PostPosted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 3:59 am 
PHD From Del Rey University!

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Stewart Title is a very reputable company. For them to allow disbursement of escrow funds prior to the completion of construction is highly unethical.Though probably not illegal.Of course they used locals to supervise the title office (huge mistake #1).And of course the money disappeared.Really should never buy property anywhere out of the US when still in construction phase.

The real clincher in this article is the comment from the real estate woman.How CR builders can not afford to cheat the clients as it does to much damage to thier good name.Since US home builders change thier name every three years or so due to tremendous amounts of litigation and bad publicity, what is to stop the tico equivalent from doing the same thing?


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PostPosted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 4:33 am 
PHD From Del Rey University!
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Location: NFM--Geezers, cowpokes and the working poor--yeeha!
Still and all, there's a cable-channel show in the US called House Hunters that routinely pimps CR housing without mentioning the price declines now and projected. Quite the hoot, this show, to those in CR in the know.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 9:04 am 
PHD From Del Rey University!
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I saw a recent episode of House Hunters and both gringo couples featured were looking in Tamarindo and on a island in Honduras. Frankly it didn't look to me like those folks had really done their homework. I'd like to be able to follow up and see how they will feel about their purchases a couple of years from now.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 02, 2009 12:17 pm 
PHD From Del Rey University!
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I have been saying this for over a year now. When you can buy a house, condo, and of course, vacant land in and/or near major US markets for less than CR, it is time to stay in the good ole' USofA. When a beachfront condo in JAco is priced higher than one in Ft. Lauderdale or South Beach, the market is off kilter. No matter how beautiful the scenery, how good the fishing, from a pure value and investment objective, land in third world countries stop being a value when priced close to, equal or higher than its US counterpart. I say pure value/investment standpoint b/c there are people who will spend whatever for their needs/happiness. IE...a multi-millionaire yachtsman buying a high dollar Los SUenos property.

The value of third world country real estate is there when it is priced way below US counterpart a la CR, Panama, Honduras, even Mexico 7-10 years ago.

Oh, and get ready, this is only the very beginning of a CR real estate collapse which could lead to a CR bank collapse. I am not aware if CR banks "sell" their loans meaning they could be holding all the risks. Don't get me started on the US bank fraud......The banks frauding us :x

Not only that, many of the lots people bought(I don't know which developers), have CR titling that make them impossible to get a mortgage. Could become very problematic...This is just a few "flaws" that will soon come to light. Not to mention the developmental impact problems.

The best time to have bought land in CR was 5-10 years ago. The best time to buy US land......now.


With that being said....See you in Key Largo :lol:

PURA VIDA!

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