Investing in the Florida Panhandle - A Good Investment
1) The Florida Panhandle is located in Northwest Florida and is known as the "Forgotten Coast". Florida real estate investments are now booming along the Forgotten Coast due largely to "The St Joe Company" which manufactured paper for many years and is the largest landholder in Florida with approximately 825,000 acres of land at 12/2004. St Joes land holdings are concentrated primarily in Northwest Florida and more than 300,000 acres of it is located within ten miles of the Gulf of Mexico. In 2003, St Joe shut down it's paper plant and started developing much of those acres of trees along the beautiful Emerald Coast of Florida into luxury master planned waterfront and golf communities such as Watercolor, Watersound, Rivercamps and affordable hometowns such as Palmetto Trace and The Hammocks.
To further drive the growth of the area, St Joe has donated 20,556 acres for the proposed relocation of the Panama City-Bay County International Airport which will be located between Hwys 77 & 79 in Panama City. St Joe has also sold 93 acres to one of the nation's largest retail developers for Pier Park, a hugh beachside shopping, amusement and entertainment complex, in Panama City Beach. News of the transaction raised Northwest Florida's profile to new heights. With a 2004 net income of $90.1 million, St Joe is a major driving force in the development of the Florida Panhandle. "Our success can only partially be measured in the value we have created thus far" said Peter Rummell, chairman and CEO of JOE.. "We won't be able to calculate its full measure for years. JOE owns enough high-quality developable land to create value for decades".
2. Florida has one of the nation's strongest economies in the country, as well as significant demographic and geographic advantages. The region’s biggest growth catalysts are St. Joe Co. developments, influx of retirees, tourism and military-defense spending.
- Now aged between 38 and 56 years, the baby boomers comprise almost one-third of the nation's population and are expected to have a hugh impact on Florida's inmigration and housing demand. While they start thinking retirement, younger boomers (late thirties to early fifties) start thinking investing in resort real estate as a second home. This second-then-retirement home cycle should continue for decades as the boomers continue to move through their retirement decades. Note: The biggest bulge in the birth rate was in the mid-1950s. These people are now in their mid-50's and are just beginning to enter this cycle in significant numbers. With numerous new developments under way along the Gulf coast and moderate housing prices by Florida standards, the Florida Panhandle is positioned to become an increasingly important player in the second-home marketplace.
- The emerging generation of baby boomer retirees, with their growing emphasis on lifestyle, community, and interdependence will totally transform the nation's housing market. Traditionally, empty nesters tend to downsize their housing and migrate to warmer climates in coastal communities to enjoy their golden years. The new urbanistic communities developing along the Panhandle offer all of this plus the ability to work and play where you live, deemphasizing the need for vehicles to a population who wish to remain independent in spite of declining mobility and health.
- Interstate 10, the state's longest east-west connector, runs through the entirety of the Florida Panhandle. Due to it's proximity to gulf coast and southeast neighbors such as Texas, Louisianna, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia and it's pristine waters and white sand beaches, the Destin/Panama City Beach area is the second most driven-to vacation destination in Florida.
- The Panhandle tourism growth in particular has sharply outpaced state and national gains — with numbers for every county from Escambia through Walton up by more than 10% last year. New communities are beginning to push inland. “You’re seeing huge residential developments planned for Freeport — the first we’ve seen off the coast,” says Tom Powell, executive director of the Walton County Economic Development Council.
3. New construction is not the only real estate investment opportunity in the Florida Panhandle. With annual population growth along the Emerald Coast far exceeding the state average, restrictions on new development and growth management regulations act to constrain growth of new housing, making the existing inventory more valuable and pricing it higher. Housing appreciation has been unprecidented in Bay, Okaloosa, Walton and Santa Rosa counties as has population growth.
Florida Trend magazine's 2005 industry outlook for residential real estate investing sees the Florida real estate market as hot, hot, hot. The magazine notes that speculative buying could create localized problems in areas of the state, but there appears to be little danger of a housing slowdown in 2005, barring a huge jump in interest rates or a catastrophic terrorist incident.
Why should you invest in the Florida Panhandle?
- The proposed International airport in Panama City
- Retiring Baby Boomers
- In-migration predictions significantly higher than the state average
- 3 deep-water ports, 2 of which are designated international trade zones
- Restrictions on new development of Master planned waterfront resort communities
- St Joe, St Joe, St Joe
Florida real estate investment is poised to remain strong and real estate investing in the Florida Panhandle is being propelled by some major players. If you haven't taken the plunge into real estate investing, you're not too late. If you are a seasoned real estate investor, you would be wise to look to northwest Florida for continuing growth and appreciation.
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