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NEWS AND EVENTS
July 24, 2006
Mexico's Baja California Opens to American Investment
For years, owning a Baja California home has been an impossible dream for most Americans.
Today, thanks to the newfound availability of traditional, US-style mortgages, the Baja market is suddenly primed for major development and Americans are pouring across the border to satisfy their desires for ownership of beachfront property that have been held in check for so long.
Until recently, many would-be Mexican real estate investors were frustrated by governmental insistence limiting property that could be acquired and how it could be paid for. Russ Schreier, president of Finance North America (www.FinanceNorthAmerica.com), explains what happened behind the scenes. "Before 2005 there were basically two options for you to buy property south of the border. You could borrow money from a Mexican bank, but there was a down side. Mexican Peso-based loans tend towards higher interest rates than US loans, tie to inflation indexes, and oftentimes cause negative amortization. Or you could pay cash. For most would-be property owners, neither was a viable option."
The equation changed last year when Schreier and his associates made the Mexican legal system their ally. Working with Mexican bank trusts (fideicomiso), FNA began financing renewable 50-year trusts on land that otherwise couldn't be bought by non-Mexicans. "With a fideicomiso, you can buy, improve and sell property just as with a traditional deed, only now you can finance it from a foreign source," says Schreier. "Best of all, the trust is renewable into perpetuity, and guaranteed by the Mexican constitution."
With Americans suddenly able to carry US-based mortgages to buy Mexican property, interest in home ownership there soared. Numerous recent studies have shown a direct link between the ability to carry an American mortgage and buying in Northern Baja, Cancun, Puerto Penasco, Los Cabos, Puerto Vallarta and San Miguel. Perhaps not coincidentally, these are all areas that FNA has had significant closings in over the past 12 months, with three Northern Baja closings just in the last few weeks.
"Everything turned out GREAT!" Tijuana realtor M. de Carmenifiaz recalled of his dealings with FNA and their financing options. Mortgage consultant Jose Saldana echoed the sentiments, saying "I'll refer all my friends to Finance North America for any Mexican financing needs. Special thanks to the entire team that made it happen!"
"FNA is undeniably the single largest source of cross- border mortgages available today," says company co-founder Christian Alvarez, adding, "With the legal changes now in place, foreigners can own land in the formerly restricted zones - within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of the beach and 100 kilometers (62 miles) of the border. All that by using the fideicomiso."
Terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) guarantee Mexico may not directly, or indirectly, expropriate property except for a public purpose. This is the equivalent of America's Eminent Domain clause. Furthermore, should it become necessary to expropriate land, NAFTA rules ensure swift and fair market compensation is paid, together with accrued interest.
These rules of fairness, combined with the ability to use financial instruments with which Americans are comfortable, have been the key to the tsunami of new interest in the Baja real estate market.
Baja offers a tranquil way of life, where clear skies over serene deserts engulf you. Visitors year-round enjoy cactus-covered mountains, soft beige sandy beaches, and sparkling waters of the Pacific or the Gulf of Mexico. Baja boasts every type of available activity, including hiking a desert wash, kayaking, walking miles of uninhabited beaches, renting a boat, shopping or bird watching. Just minutes from the California border, Northern Baja California is a major center of ecotourism, with whale sanctuaries, coral reefs, surf destinations, and desert areas with exotic animals and plants.
And with the ability to handle purchases, financing, refinancing, cash-outs, and construction loans, with access to millions of dollars per transaction, FNA's office has become a first stop for realtors, buyers and developers throughout the Northern Hemisphere.
"No longer will American investment be stunted by bureaucratic regulations," proclaims Schreier. "We'‚ve effectively eliminated the cross-border barriers that once limited real estate investment south of the border."
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About Finance North America
Finance North America can be found online at: www.FinanceNorthAmerica.com.
Finance North America
Russ Schreier, President CEO
Email: russ@financenorthamerica.com
Toll Free from US/Canada 1-866-Yes-4-Mex (1-866-937-4639) From Mexico 001-858-481-4871
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August 26, 2006
GLOBAL CAPITAL
Mexican Resorts Show No Sign of Catching U.S. Housing's Cold
Despite worry, the flow of foreign money into vacation sites in Baja and elsewhere hasn't slowed.
By Evelyn Iritani, Times Staff Writer
Real estate experts in Mexico worry that the giant sound they hear is the softening U.S. housing market sucking out the money that Americans have poured into vacation homes south of the border.
But neither the cooling American housing market nor tense Mexican presidential politics so far have stemmed the influx of foreign dollars into Mexico's booming coastal resort areas, government and real estate officials said.
When FONATUR, Mexico's tourism development agency, put the first phase of Litibu on the market a few months ago, buyers snapped up the 500 acres of the newest Pacific Coast resort for $125 million. Foreign investment into Mexico is on track to hit $20 billion this year, up from $17.6 billion in 2005, according to the government.
"We have some concerns about the slowing U.S. housing market but there are many other things working for us," said John McCarthy, FONATUR's director general, who was in Beverly Hills recently to speak to U.S. investors. "Most of our buyers are baby boomers who have paid off in good part their initial mortgage and are coming into inheritance money."
In addition, real estate experts say, Mexico's resort property market might experience a smaller price shock than U.S. homes will because it is a new area of investment and the buyers tend to be higher-income and less likely to be forced into fire sales.
"The cooling real estate market could take this from being a very, very positive trend to a mildly positive trend," said Christopher Thornberg, an economist with Beacon Economics, a real estate consulting firm in Los Angeles.
That's good news for Janette and Harvey Craig, who paid $60,000 four years ago for a piece of beachfront property in Litibu, a small beach community about 30 miles north of Puerto Vallerta. They expect the parcel, which is worth about $300,000 today, to become even more valuable when the nearby resort is completed in three years. It will include hotels and condominiums, 910 homes and an 18-hole golf course designed by Greg Norman.
"It's just going to push prices higher and higher," said Janette, a part-owner of Garcia Realty in the nearby surfing town of Sayulita.
In the past, foreigners have been wary of investing in Mexico because of legal problems, corruption and red tape. But changes in Mexican laws have made it easier for foreigners to own property through bank trusts. Major U.S. firms have begun offering mortgages and title insurance.
Mexico also is drawing more attention from Europe. Last year, Spanish companies were the top investors in the tourist industry, pumping $416 million into resort properties. U.S. investors followed with $321 million, according to the tourism agency. McCarthy rejects the notion that tourism only benefits wealthy developers and well-heeled travelers. He pointed out that the average incomes in Quintana Roo and Baja California Sur, the states that are home to Cancun and Cabo San Lucas, are among the highest in the nation. Tourism is the third-largest generator of foreign exchange in Mexico, after oil and remittances from Mexicans living abroad.
FONATUR identifies promising tourism areas, buys land, draws up a master plan and develops basic services such as roads, sewage facilities and power plants. The government then sells the property to private developers.
By getting state and local officials to sign off on a project, the Mexican government has dramatically reduced the risks to foreign investors, said Doug Regelous, president of Los Angeles-based Daedalus Projects Group Inc.
Daedalus is finalizing the purchase of approximately 9,000 acres on the East Cape, a largely undeveloped stretch of coastline along the Gulf of California between San Jose del Cabo and Punta Pescadero.
He declined to divulge the specifics of the project because the deal had not been finalized. But he said it would contain an upscale resort hotel, golf course and residential community with a focus on water sports.
"The East Cape is a swimmable ocean," he said. "The Pacific isn't."
In just a few decades, the southern tip of the Baja Peninsula has become one of Mexico's most exclusive getaways.
Once known for inexpensive time-share properties, the rugged coast between Cabo San Lucas and the sleepier San Jose del Cabo is lined with luxury resorts that charge as much as $1,000 a night for hotel rooms. Oceanfront estates sell for as much as $7 million. On busy weekends, it is not uncommon to see 100 private jets at the airport.
Mexico's real estate boom also has been helped by the development of upscale "fractional ownership" properties that allow buyers to purchase a piece of a condominium or home.
Barry Hacker and his wife, Paivi, sold their beachfront home in Florida after it was damaged by two hurricanes in two years. They said they have invested "tens of millions" of dollars in a piece of waterfront property in Ixtapa, a resort area on the west coast of Mexico. They plan to build a 10-room boutique hotel called Punta Romantica and offer fractional ownership in 10, four-bedroom villas on the property.
Hacker, a partner in KPMG's Tokyo office, said many wealthy Americans were selling their waterfront properties in Florida and California while prices were high. "We can deliver a villa for a fraction of the cost that's also oceanfront and is fully staffed with all the hotel services, a gym, a spa and a restaurant," he said.
Mexican tourism officials are sensitive to criticism that this rapid development threatens some of the country's most beautiful coastline and marine reserves and puts a strain on the rural communities that bear the brunt of the rising land costs, increased traffic and an influx of people looking for work.
These challenges have come into sharp focus along the east coast of Baja California Sur, which borders the Gulf of California, home of the largest marine park in Mexico.
FONATUR has teamed up with Loreto Bay Co., a Scottsdale, Ariz., developer, to build what is being billed as the "largest resort community in North America committed to the principles of sustainable development." The Mexican government invested $200 million on roads, water treatment plants and other infrastructure.
The $3-billion project, called the Villages of Loreto Bay, will create a town of 6,000 homes in neighborhoods designed for pedestrians and golf carts. No cars will be allowed. Nearly two-thirds of the 8,000 acres will be maintained as a "greenlands preserve."
Homes are being constructed with locally produced adobe bricks, and the developer has leased land for a wind farm so the project can generate its own electricity, said Jim Grogan, Loreto Bay's president and chief executive.
In two years, the project has sold 640 homes, whose prices start at $380,000. Two-thirds of the buyers are Americans, many from California, and the remainder are mostly Canadians with a sprinkling of Mexicans.
"There's no question, people are willing to pay a premium for sustainable development," Grogan said.
The U.S. firm has established a nonprofit foundation that has bought new equipment for the local hospital and purchased a patrol boat for the marine conservancy, according to Grogan. The Loreto Bay Foundation gets 1% of all home sales and resales, or about $3 million so far.
Rob Faris, an economist with the Harvard Institute for International Development, praised the developer's efforts to limit the project's environmental footprint. But he worries about the impact such a large number of people will have on southern Baja's limited water supply, the marine park and the community of Loreto. Within two decades, the population of the sparsely populated region is expected to balloon from 15,000 to 120,000, according to a study co-authored by Faris.
"I think their intentions are largely noble," Faris said of Loreto Bay Co. "But creating a sustainable community of this magnitude in Mexico, it hasn't been done before." > Back to Top
September 07, 2006 |

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THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT
Ten reasons why Mexico is likely to remain stable
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER
aoppenheimer@herald.com
Contrary to forecasts that Mexico's President-elect Felipe Calderón will not be able to rule effectively because of defeated leftist candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador's vow to make the country ungovernable, there are 10 powerful reasons to believe that Calderón is likely to weather the storm.
First, while Calderón won the July 2 election by only 234,000 votes, he will have the largest legislative bloc in both houses of Congress. Sure, he will still need votes from other parties to pass major reforms, but he will have significantly greater representation in Congress than outgoing President Vicente Fox.
Second, Calderón, a former congressional leader of Fox's center-right National Action Party, is likely to be much better than Fox at handling Congress. When I once asked Calderón what had been Fox's biggest mistake, Calderón said it was the president's failure to reach out to Congress.
As an example, Calderón pointed out that he often didn't have access to the president when he was congressional leader of Fox's party. If elected, Calderón would regularly call legislators across the political spectrum, he said.
Third, Calderón may find it easier than Fox to get support from the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the third largest congressional bloc. The once almighty PRI, which did worse than ever in the recent elections, wants to resurrect itself as a major political force by becoming the swing vote in Congress. That will entail backing at least some key government bills.
Earlier this week, I asked new Senate President Manlio Fabio Beltrones, of the PRI, whether Calderón will have an easier time than Fox passing economic reforms in Congress. ''There is no doubt in my mind,'' Beltrones told me. He added, ``There is a greater understanding of the crises we are facing.''
Fourth, Calderón will shift to the center, and perhaps a bit to the left, to try to win over some of López Obrador's supporters. Calderón's top foreign affairs advisor, Arturo Sarukhan, told me this week that the president-elect ``is starting to reach out to leftist constituencies.''
Fifth, following Tuesday's unanimous decision by the seven judges of Mexico's electoral tribunal, López Obrador's claims that he -- and not Calderón -- is Mexico's president-elect, and that his critics ''can go to hell with their institutions,'' will sound increasingly outlandish to many of his own followers. López Obrador's once massive street rallies may become much smaller.
Sixth, López Obrador's party will most likely split into various factions. While the radical wing of the party will continue supporting the defeated candidate, key party leaders -- including several PRD governors -- are likely to seek a more moderate course. They know they did better than ever in this election, and will want to remain in the democratic arena to win the next one.
Seventh, Calderón is winning the international public opinion battle.
Even before Tuesday's ruling, major international media that had earlier lent credence to López Obrador's claims of fraud had made a dramatic editorial U-turn. Last Sunday,
Spain's influential daily El Pais carried an editorial entitled, ''Obrador's Excess,'' in which it stated that ``the damage López Obrador is causing to Mexico's democratic left is incalculable.''
Calderón has since received congratulation calls from Spain's socialist Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero and several other influential leftist leaders who have influence over PRD leaders.
Eighth, public opinion polls are showing that since López Obrador started organizing civil resistance protests that almost paralyzed downtown Mexico City for weeks, his popularity has fallen sharply. Some surveys show that, if a new election were held today, Calderón would win by up to 13 percentage points.
Ninth, the markets are showing optimism. In recent weeks, the Mexican peso has strengthened against the U.S. dollar and the Mexican stock market has risen. If anything, it means that investors -- the most cowardly species on earth -- are confident that Calderón will be able to govern.
Tenth, recent history, such as the 1994 Zapatista rebellion in Chiapas, suggests that Mexico's radical movements make big headlines, but are most often short-lived. Unless López Obrador heeds the ruling by the electoral tribunal, which validated his own party's observers' count on election night, he risks following the same fate as the Zapatistas' Subcommander Marcos -- he will become increasingly irrelevant.
Summing up, Calderón may end up being a good, mediocre or lousy president.
But he is not facing insurmountable obstacles that would prevent him from doing a good job. > Back to Top
Calendar of Events:
September
September 16 Mexican Independence Day
Baja Sea Turtle Rescue
Cabo San Lucas
October
Los Cabos Tequila and Mariachi Festival
Bisbee’s Alumni Tournament - Cabo San Lucas; www.bisbees.com
Los Cabos Billfish Tournament
Annual Chuy’s Catch and Release - East Cape
2nd half of October
Cabo San Lucas Fair and Festivals - Cabo San Lucas
Bisbee’s Black and Blue Marlin Tournament - Cabo San Lucas; www.bisbees.com
Western Outdoor News Tuna Jackpot - Cabo San Lucas
Patron Saint Festival - Cabo San Lucas
Off-Road Race “Cabo San Lucas” - Cabo San Lucas
November
Bisbee’s Fishing Tournament - Cabo San Lucas
For Pete’s Sake Fishing Tournament - Cabo San Lucas
Annual Won Tuna Jackpot Tournament - Cabo San Lucas
December
Dec. 24th - Christmas Eve
Dec 25th - Christmas Day
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