Los Angeles Times

Wealthy Brazilians flock to Miami

South Florida is seen as a safe place for real estate investment, yet locals see few benefits.

- By Josh Boak and Jennifer Kay Boak and Kay write for the Associated Press.

MIAMI — Facing a teetering economy at home, wealthy Brazilians have been pouring money into what they increasing­ly see as the safest place to invest: South Florida real estate.

So are Argentines, Colombians, Mexicans, Venezuelan­s, French and Turks — almost anyone with money to shelter, a direct f light to Miami and a shaky economy to flee.

Their cash has helped drive the latest twist in Miami’s ever-evolving transforma­tion — from a 19th century rail stop to a tourist-and-retiree hub to a haven for Cuban refugees to now a harbor for global investors. No American skyline has undergone a more drastic face-lift from foreign cash in the last decade: Luxury condo towers and swanky retailers crowd a downtown once marred by empty lots.

And almost no developer expects the demand to stop.

Yet Miamians as a whole have scarcely benefited from the glitz. Wages have actually dropped for Miami workers in the last year. Unemployme­nt tops the national average. Miami contains the largest share of renters in the country who devote more than 30% of their pay to housing — the level the government deems burdensome.

“We’re not seeing the benefits of that income being disposed of in the local economy,” said Ned Murray, associate director of Florida Internatio­nal University’s Metropolit­an Center. “That impacts local businesses, and we’re losing opportunit­ies to create year-round housing for our workers. They’re moving out.”

But with its glamorous locale and easy access, Miami real estate offers an asset that’s appreciati­ng at a time when other investment­s have shrunk or turned frightenin­gly volatile. That’s despite being on a stretch of land prone to natural disasters.

“All of the insecurity around the rest of the world only reminds people how important it is to have assets in the United States,” said Alicia Cervera Lamadrid, a developer who is leading sales efforts for the planned 57story Elysee, with condo units starting at $1.65 million and personal wine storage available for residents.

No fewer than 126 residentia­l towers are planned for constructi­on in South Florida. One sign of the scale of wealth from abroad is that the majority of foreign purchases are being funded with cash, not debt.

Last year, foreigners spent $6.1 billion on Miamiarea real estate — 36% of all such investment, according to the Miami Assn. of Realtors. Nationally, foreigners account for just 8% of sales.

The influx has been sudden enough that the federal government has announced plans to monitor home purchases exceeding $3 million in Miami and New York City. Starting in March, the government will temporaril­y require title companies to identify buyers of property. Authoritie­s have grown concerned that money launderers may be using anonymous holding companies to stash money in high-end real estate.

The average luxury condo price in Miami Beach has surged 35% from a year ago to $3.7 million, according to the real estate brokerage firm Douglas Elliman.

Downtown Miami is similarly “beginning to shift, but the question is, to whose benefit?” said Arden Shank, executive director of Neighborho­od Housing Services of South Florida. “It doesn’t benefit the people who have been there for a long time.”

The metro area’s unemployme­nt rate is 5.5%, compared with 5% nationally. Average hourly earnings have dipped 0.4% to $22.57 from a year ago. By contrast, the national average wage has risen more than 2% in that time. Census Bureau data show that high rents burden 66% of Miami tenants, compared with 52% nationwide.

Regardless of wealth, everyone in South Florida faces the potentiall­y dire consequenc­es of climate change.

Experts warn that as the seas rise further, flooding may become permanent, turning streets into canals, endangerin­g access to drinking water and eroding the beaches that have long drawn people to Miami.

Yet to many wealthy internatio­nal buyers, the opportunit­ies appear to outweigh those risks.

Because so many of her clients now own Miami property, Sao Paulo-based interior designer Brunete Fraccaroli recently bought a condo at One Paraiso, a 53-story tower with a beach club slated to be finished next year. She expects her Florida clientele to grow as Brazil’s plight intensifie­s.

Analysts say the South American country may be headed for its longest downturn in more than a century. Operating losses and labor strikes have battered the state oil company, Petrobras. Government spending cuts have failed to curb the deficit. Political corruption has left the country in chaos. Its currency, the real, lost nearly 50% of its value against the dollar last year.

“We think that the Brazilian real is going to drop more and more — it’s going to be worse,” said Fraccaroli, who also stars in Brazil’s reality TV show “Rich Women.”

 ?? Wilfredo Lee
Associated Press ?? LUXURY STORES in Miami are proliferat­ing as wealthy Latin Americans invest in real estate.
Wilfredo Lee Associated Press LUXURY STORES in Miami are proliferat­ing as wealthy Latin Americans invest in real estate.

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