Buying
Puerto Vallarta
Real Estate Gets Easier
Lured by beachfront vistas,
quaint colonial backdrops and a historic construction
boom, thousands of Americans are heading down
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico way to snap up vacation
homes, retirement villas and investment properties.
Steve McLinden - Bankrate.com
Onward, the Mexican land rush.
Lured by beachfront vistas, quaint colonial
backdrops and a historic construction boom,
thousands of Americans are heading down Mexico
way to snap up vacation homes, retirement villas
and investment properties.
Heartened by wide-sweeping reforms in the country's
judicial and foreign-investment systems over
the past decade or so and heightened interest
from investors, many Yanks have watched the
values of their south-of -the-border properties
head north in surprisingly short order.
"The market has just become prolific in
Mexico, with about 1.5 million Americans now
owning property there," says Mitch Creekmore,
vice president of the Stewart Title Guaranty
de Mexico office in Houston and one of America's
foremost experts on Mexican real-estate acquisition.
"Values in some markets have tripled in
five years -- far exceeding the rates of return
you find in the United States."
Barriers Falling - Yet foreigners
are still paying a premium to finance such deals,
either through developer/seller financing that
requires at least 30 percent down, or pricey,
hard-to-get mortgage loans at Mexican banks
that can hover well above 15 percent.
That's why several U.S. institutions are gearing
up their own lending programs to cater to the
growing niche. A handful of banks, including
Marshall & Ilsley, Sonada Financial Group
and Collateral Mortgage, now provide mortgages
to American entities buying Mexican real estate.
Others, such as GS Mortgage Securities, plan
rollouts in 2005. Collateral announced its "Mexico
-- My Dream" program in late 2004, focusing
on the vibrant Cancun and Riviera Maya markets.
The company plans to step up its program in
2005, says Creekmore, whose firm, along with
a few other U.S. companies, offers title insurance
in Mexico.
Previously, American banks were reluctant to
lend monies for Mexican real estate because
of unreliable foreclosure laws and the potential
for corruption, says Jeronimo Gomez del Campo,
partner in the Phoenix office of Bryan Cave
LLP, who specializes in the representation of
U.S. companies and financial institutions investing
in Mexico.
"But it is next to impossible now for
corrupt officials or other individuals to mess
with the chain of title or encumber properties
for no legitimate reason," says Gomez del
Campo. "Under NAFTA and other reforms,
the Mexican government can't discriminate against
foreigners in terms of property ownership."
Hence, Mexican haciendas are becoming hotter
and bigger targets for many Americans and Canadians,
especially those who have been priced out of
U.S. resort areas, he says.
Rules, Restrictions Remain -
However, Mexican real-estate laws still differ
substantially from the American system and there
are many crucial nuances to consider before
cutting a deal for Mexican property, say experts.
While foreigners can purchase real estate in
their own names throughout the country's interior,
they can only buy property in Mexico's "restricted
zone" -- within 31 miles of its coastlines
and 62 miles of its borders -- as the beneficiary
of a Mexican bank trust called a "fideicomiso."
In this arrangement, the bank technically holds
legal title to the real estate but its beneficiaries,
who are known as the "fideicomisarios,"
retain the right to use, improve, sell, and
will the property as they would if they were
fee-simple owners.
While there's more bureaucracy involved in
the trust process, "it is still as good
as outright ownership ... and it's a real opportunity
for people from the U.S. to settle in some incredibly
beautiful areas such as Puerto Vallarta and
Cancun," says Gomez del Campo. "Prior
to 1992, all you could do was lease."
Closings Pricey - The Mexican
bank trust, which costs about $500 to establish,
is good for 50 years and is easily renewable
for another 50 years. Other costs, however,
can add up quickly. There's a mandatory real-estate
transfer tax, which averages 2 percent, a 1-percent
to 3-percent fee for a government-appointed
"notario publico" for processing and
transaction certification, plus a bank appraisal
fee.
"At the end of the day, buyers just have
to realize that they are going to pay at least
6 percent to close a deal, as opposed to about
1 to 2 percent in the U.S.," said Stewart
Title's Creekmore, who teaches classes to real
estate agents on Mexican real estate. "While
real estate deals in Mexico are more expensive
... some of that (extra money) goes to providing
protective benefits to the foreign buyer. And
once you do close, it's a little easier going,
because property taxes are much cheaper and
the trust fees are small."
Indeed, property taxes are only about a half
of one percent in the Los Cabos region of Baja
California, says Ted Downward, co-owner of Century
21 Paradise in Los Cabos. The cost of living
in the area, which encompasses Cabos San Lucas
and San Jose del Cabo, is also low and seems
to be dropping as Mexican merchants adjust their
prices to compete with such new-to-the-market
American retailers as Costco, he said.
The Century 21 Paradise agent recalls when
he first came to Los Cabos 21 years ago. "There
were just a handful of gringos who lived here.
Now, there are tens of thousands." Property
values have risen rapidly and in many cases
have more than tripled in the last half decade,
Downward said. "It's been almost astronomical.
I guess because we were so behind the U.S. for
so long, everything here seems like a bargain."
U.S. lenders can offer much more competitive
mortgage rates to buyers than their Mexican
counterparts, although rates are still slightly
higher than what buyers would pay for American
real estate due to the added risks and extra
legal precautions necessary to do business in
another country, say real estate agents.
Cash, Not Credit, Rules - Currently
most loans used to buy Mexican property originate
through developers or sellers, who require down
payments of 30 percent or more and terms of
7 percent interest or more on the balance. "These
are generally five- to 10-year loans that require
a lot of cash," Downward says. "The
good thing is that if you have the 30 percent,
then you instantly qualify here, regardless
of your credit."
In the past, the main obstacle for U.S. lenders
has been Mexico's lax foreclosure laws, which
virtually prohibited them from pursuing homeowners
in Mexico who were in default. "That is
changing," says Downward. "The Mexican
government is becoming more reasonable and that
is making it a little easier to foreclose and
a little more worth the risk."
Representatives of more than a half-dozen mortgage-lending
companies interested in offering Mexican mortgages
from the U.S. side have talked with Downward
recently about opportunities in the country,
he says. "That's a market that is really
going to open up. Lenders are just trying to
figure out how to make it work."
"We have big coasts where this can happen,"
Lopez said. |