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Governor Of Florida LOSES IT After Miami-Dade County Real Estate Market IMPLODES!

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19,000 homes sit unsold in Miami as

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condo prices crater and desperate

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sellers pull listings at record rates.

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Overnight, Florida's real estate dream

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has become a disaster. With rents

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dropping downtown and foreclosure

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warnings echoing across the state,

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Governor Dantis scrambles for answers in

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an emergency session. But the truth is

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clear. The collapse isn't just Miami's

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problem, and it didn't happen by

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accident. What if the American system

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itself built a housing market doomed to

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explode? First here and soon everywhere.

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The crisis in Florida has already begun.

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How deep does this go and who let it

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happen? Fast forward to April 2025 and

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Miami's real estate market is

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suffocating under the weight of 19,319

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active listings. A number that haunts

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every brokerage from Bickl to Aventura.

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Homes that once vanished in bidding wars

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now sit untouched for weeks, sometimes

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months, as sellers/prices and buyers

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vanish. This isn't a seasonal pause or a

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blip on the radar. It's a flood of

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unsold properties that's tripled Miami's

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inventory in just 3 years, pushing

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supply to nearly 10 months, three times

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the national average. Foreclosure

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filings have started to climb with

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county records showing a sharp uptick in

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default notices across South Florida.

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Agents report desperate calls from

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owners who bought at the peak, now

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staring down the prospect of negative

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equity as values slide and mortgage

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payments stay stubbornly high. Downtown,

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rents have dropped for the first time in

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years with landlords offering

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concessions just to keep units filled. A

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stunning reversal from the days when

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tenants lined up for overpriced studios.

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The D-listing ratio, the share of homes

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quietly yanked from the market before a

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sale, has set a new national record. In

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July, for every 59 homes sold, 100 were

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delisted as owners retreated in panic

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rather than accept the new reality.

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Title companies are reporting a surge in

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distressed sales. And investor forums

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buzz with stories of deals falling apart

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at the closing table. These numbers

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aren't isolated data points. They're the

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first cracks in a system that was

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supposed to be bulletproof. The American

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promise of ever rising home values, easy

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money, and endless demand has collided

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headon with the hard math of over supply

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and eroding confidence. Miami's listing

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surge isn't just a warning sign for

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Florida. It's a siren for every city

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that believed the boom could last

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forever. Tampa's skyline tells a story

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just as grim. In 2021, the median condo

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price sat at $310,000.

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By spring 2025, that number collapsed to

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$230,000,

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a plunge of nearly 25% in less than 4

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years. The pain isn't limited to prices.

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Tampa's condo inventory exploded to

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nearly 4,000 active listings, up 85%

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yearover-year with brokers there

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reporting the same sense of paralysis

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that's gripped Miami. Sellers who once

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counted on bidding wars now chase buyers

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with price cuts, incentives, and

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desperate offers to cover closing costs.

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The D-listing ratio in Tampa has soared

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with more condos being yanked off the

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market unsold than at any point since

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the Great Recession. Sarasota, long a

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haven for retirees and second home

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buyers, has not escaped the carnage. A

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typical condo that fetched $600,000

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during the pandemic boom is now

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struggling to sell for $420,000.

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That's a 30% drop, wiping out years of

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supposed gains in a matter of months.

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Open houses draw more curious neighbors

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than serious buyers. And agents report

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that price reductions have become

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routine, not rare. Inventory in Sarasota

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is stacking up across every neighborhood

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from downtown towers to waterfront

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complexes as the pool of qualified

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buyers evaporates. The collapse isn't

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confined to a single city or coast. From

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Tampa Bay to Sarasota's beaches, the

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same pattern repeats. Plunging prices,

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surging listings, and a wave of sellers

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retreating from the market. These

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numbers reveal a statewide crisis, not

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an isolated Miami meltdown. The promise

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that Florida real estate could defy

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gravity has unraveled, exposing a system

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stretched to its breaking point. If

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these trends continue, no metro in the

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state is safe from the fallout.

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Governor Roy Dantis stepped in front of

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the cameras in Tallahassee, flanked by

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state lawmakers and housing officials as

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panic swept through Florida's real

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estate sector. In early 2025, with condo

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owners on the brink and headlines

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warning of a financial contagion, Dantis

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called an emergency legislative session.

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His tone shifting from boosterism to

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damage control. The governor, once quick

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to tout Florida's economic miracle, now

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faced a market unraveling on his watch.

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His agenda was clear. Address the condo

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crisis, restore confidence, and stop the

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bleeding before it spread to the broader

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economy. D Santis opened the session by

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warning that the collapse threatened not

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just Miami, but every homeowner and

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business in the state. He called for

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rapid action on insurance reform,

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property tax relief, and new oversight

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of condo associations, policies aimed at

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shoring up a system under strain. But

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behind the rhetoric, frustration

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simmerred. Lawmakers grilled housing

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regulators about why warning signs were

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ignored and condo owners demanded

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protection from skyrocketing fees and

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special assessments. The governor's

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critics seized the spotlight, pointing

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to years of diverted affordable housing

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funds and lacks oversight as root causes

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of the meltdown. Dantis pushed back,

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blaming federal interest rate hikes and

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insurance market failures. But the sense

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of urgency was unmistakable. The state's

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economic reputation and the political

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future of its governor now hung in the

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balance. As the emergency session

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dragged on, the gap between political

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promises and the realities facing

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ordinary Flidians grew harder to ignore.

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The American system that once fueled

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Florida's boom had left its leaders

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scrambling for answers with the whole

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country watching. Let me take you back

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to the Miami boom years. Because

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understanding the collapse means seeing

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just how far reality drifted from the

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numbers. For nearly a decade and a half,

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Miami real estate was the ultimate

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American success story. From 2007

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through 2022, home values in Miami Dade

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soared by more than 200% with the

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steepest climb in the pandemic era. In

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2022 alone, the median price for a

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single family home jumped 22.2%.

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outpacing wage growth by a mile and

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leaving local incomes in the dust. It

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didn't matter if you were a retiree, a

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remote tech worker from San Francisco,

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or a Brazilian investor with a suitcase

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full of cash. Everyone wanted in. By

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spring 2022, inventory had plunged to

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just 6,376

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available homes, the lowest ever

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recorded for the region. Listings

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vanished in days, sometimes hours, as

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buyers lined up for virtual tours and

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wired deposits sight unseen. Bidding

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wars became the rule, not the exception,

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with properties selling for 10%, 15%,

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even 20% over asking. The city's priceto

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ratio blew past historic highs with

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investors betting on endless

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appreciation rather than sustainable

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rental yields. Miami's price to income

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ratio topped nine, meaning the average

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family needed 9 years worth of paychecks

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just to afford a median home, a level

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that would have triggered alarm bells

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anywhere else. Cash was king. In 2022,

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43% of Miami home sales closed without a

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mortgage. And in the luxury segment,

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that number climbed above 53%.

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Foreign capital poured in from Latin

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America, Russia, and Europe, swelling

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the ranks of all cash buyers, and

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fueling a speculative frenzy. Developers

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raced to break ground on new towers in

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Bickl and Edgewater, convinced that

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