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![]() "thunder" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 11 Apr 2004 01:02:13 +0000, NOYB wrote: As usual, your timing is impeccable. Just today, in the local paper: Naples Daily News To print this page, select File then Print from your browser URL: http://www.naplesnews.com/npdn/news/...796311,00.html Naples is a very nice town, so don't get me wrong, but that building report is quite scary. I have witnessed many overheated building booms. Bust is invariably part of the cycle. 40-50% price increases are not healthy and not of long duration. Prices had gone up 26% per year from 1998-2001. They then leveled off for two years...and just about kept pace with inflation. However, "bust" is part of the cycle only in areas that are affected by layoffs, recession, and attrition. Naples isn't one of those areas. In recession years, prices are flat (but they don't decline), and inventory builds. As soon as the economy starts an upturn, inventories decline and prices soar again. The majority of the people in Naples are retirees who already earned their money and are bringing it down here in their retirement. The retirees now are the baby boomers...a huge population with enormous wealth and very little debt. An entire service population has grown as a result, and the service industry feeds on the retirees. As long as the population continues to grow faster than attrition (ie--from people dying), the demand for housing will grow. Over the past year, Collier County's population grew by almost 15%. Consequently, the demand for housing (expensive housing) drove the median price up more than 40%. Is it sustainable? Probably not at the same rate of increase. However, you'll never see a true "bust" where prices begin to fall. They'll just level off until the next boom. |