That's the title of an article in the Wall Street Journal written about the slump in sales in Naples, Florida. My best friend (besides my wife) bought a unit in Naples about 5 years ago. His builder held a lottery to see who would get the unit. You had little choice of which unit you were going to get--the market was very hot. The median price for units more than doubled in less than 5 years and they weren't cheap before they doubled.
The WSJ said, "The frenzied run-up promoted economists at banking concern National City Corp. and the economic consulting firm Global Insight Inc. to label Naples ‘the most overvalued’ housing market in the U.S. in the second quarter of 2005, a dubious honor it retains. Today, prices are dropping, the number of unsold homes on the market has swelled to more than twice the national average and investors are scrambling to unload their properties...It's increasingly evident that investors and speculators here and elsewhere played a greater role than previously thought in pumping up the real estate bubble--especially near the end of the run."
It is interesting to note that the National Association of Realtors (NAR) estimates that 28% of all buyers in 2006 were investors. In Naples, Florida, it was estimated that more than 50% of the purchasers were investors. My friends saw another property they would like to purchase in the Naples area. They have had their existing unit listed with a Realtor for the past 8 months with only 1 person who even came close to making an offer, and that was subject to the sale of his unit in Naples, which of course like most others did not sell. Numerous Realtors predict it's going to be at least another 12 months before the Naples market has any type of rebound. I hope my friends can hold on.

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