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Sunny Isles Beach: Florida’s Existing Home Sales Up 28%, Condo Sales Up 45% in August 2009
SUNNY ISLES BEACH, Fla., Sept. 24, 2009 – Florida’s existing home sales rose in August – marking a full calendar year (12 months) that sales activity increased in the year-to-year comparison, according to the latest housing data ...
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Miami Real Estate News: 2Q Home Sales Up 23 percent, Condo Sales Up 29 percent
Sales of existing single-family homes in Florida rose 23 percent in second quarter 2009 compared to the same period a year earlier, according to the latest housing statistics from the Florida Association of Realtors® (FAR). A total of 43,125 existing homes ...
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Florida’s Existing Home, Condo Sales Rise in April 2009
Florida’s existing home sales rose in April – the eighth consecutive month that sales activity increased in the year-to-year comparison, according to the latest housing data released by the Florida Association of Realtors® (FAR). April’s statewide sales ...
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* … may be observed once a year from the windows and balconies facing south in highly desired, ultra-luxurious, Sunny Isles Beach waterfront condo developments - without spotting scopes! Miami’s only one mile stretch, frolicking natural culture! For the connoisseur of such happenings, condominium units ...
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Florida’s Existing Home, Condo Sales Rise by 30% - Home Sales Up Even 32.7 % Over February 09 sales
Sunny Isles Beach, Fla., April 2009 – Florida’s existing home sales increased in March, making it the seventh month in a row that sales activity demonstrated gains in the year-to-year comparison, according to the latest housing ...
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Sunny Isles Beach Broker News: http://www.sunnyislesbeachbroker.com
Sales of existing single-family homes in Florida rose 13 percent in fourth quarter 2008 compared to the same period a year earlier, according to the latest housing statistics from the Florida Association of Realtors® (FAR). A total of 30,163 existing homes sold statewide in ...
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A recent study by three leading professors from Columbia and Wichita State universities has concluded that the housing crisis has been greatly overblown.
Charles W. Calomiris, a Henry Kaufman professor of financial institutions at Columbia University and a visiting research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Stanley D. Longhofer ...
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