Author: arroyolarue@gmail.com

How Caribbean Real Estate Is Going Virtual

 

By Alexander Britell 

Beyond the ways the coronavirus pandemic has changed the way we move, shop and interact, it’s also changing the way real estate transacts. 

While much deal activity, particularly on the residential side, has slowed, the movement that remains is happening in a very different way: virtually.

Travel bans, stay-at-home orders and shutdowns across the region have made in-person showings impossible, so agents in the region are finding new ways to show their properties. 

That means virtual and 3D home tours on line, photo and video-heavy presentations and, in places where some movement is allowed, having brokers and agents do Facetime or Zoom walk-throughs with their clients. 

“I had an agent that just had two “virtual” showings in Eleuthera before the country shut down,” said Colin Lightbourn of Engel & Volkers Bahamas in Nassau. “We would call the buyer on Whatsapp and have the video and walk-through. A live agent is the closest things to actually putting somebody in the house.”

Indeed, Engel & Volkers Bahamas recently sent out clients a virtual “guide” to buying real estate in The Bahamas, from virtual consultations to “personalized” home searches. 

It’s a trend that has quickly spread across the Caribbean. 

“We are moving to have every listing with a 3D virtual tour going forward,” said Oriana Juvelier, vice president at Puerto Rico Sotheby’s International Realty. “We’re still fielding quite a bit of interest and getting properties [that have video tours] under contract and moving forward. These are very interesting times.”

Mark Gaus, sales associate at RE/MAX Cayman Islands, echoed that. 

“As social distancing becomes commonplace and the Cayman Islands are currently under a strong curfew, now more than ever being able to showcase your properties in a digital format is key,” Gaus told Caribbean Journal Invest. “Professional photography, drone images, video and virtual tours with floorplans allow a potential purchaser to basically walk through the property and make an informed decision to purchase.  I was just speaking with a customer from Canada today who requested these marketing types as they are unable to view in person.”

Gavin Christie, managing partner at CA Christie in The Bahamas, said the online platform is “our new norm.”

“We have shifted to a 100 percent online-virtual platform,” he said. “We have embraced technology and are utilizing it to service our clients via online showings, 3D walk throughs and even new apps like Home Rover.”

caribbean real estate virtual

It’s also changed the way agents interact with each other. 

This week, for example, regional real estate platform Selling the Caribbean and Christie have organized a new Zoom series on the new state of doing business in the Caribbean real estate market. 

“Most of the agents that I have spoken to are participating in Zoom meetings either that are hosted by their own brokerage or that they are connecting to via the industry. I have heard from most of the agents are trying to stay connected and keep a positive outlook,” said Gina de Varona, director of Selling the Caribbean.

For some agents and brokers, particularly in the Caribbean, it’s a continuation of a years-long process of virtual showings, not out of the ordinary when most potential buyers don’t actually live within the market. 

Indeed, much real estate work in the Caribbean has been about doing just that — marketing remotely and introducing buyers to properties initially through digital tours, photos and videos. 

“Prior to this we have been actively using Matterport for virtual tours and video tours for prospects who are off island,” said Sean O’Neill, managing director at The Agency Turks and Caicos. “This has given us a library of media on different properties which has been extremely beneficial in the current circumstances.”

And for the deals that are already taking place, it’s taken all of the procedural work virtual, too. 

“We still have to do our business, and at the same time we’ve got lawyers and bankers and other people we work with that also need to be virtual, getting mortgages approved and confirming deposits have been received. It’s created two or three times the amount of work — once you have someone interested or even on deals that were signed pre-pandemic, ensuring they close and keeping up with all of the different parties involved.”

So is there still activity? Lightbourn said yes. 

Deals are still happening, he said, driven mostly by opportunity-hunting buyers. 

“I’m getting texts and emails with ‘I’m motivated,’ or ‘if there’s a deal let me know,’” he said. “So the buyers are shopping.”

Part of that is coming from what Lighbourn termed “bully” offers. 

“People feel sellers should be more motivated than they are,” he said. “People are seeing this as more of a 9/11 than a post-recession, a shorter-term situation.”

One such “bully” offer was accepted, he said, at 83 percent of the asking price on a $1.9 million sale. 

“The contingency is that the new owner has to close when they can actually come and take possession,” he said. 

caribbean real estate virtual

It’s not yet clear how long it will take for the real estate market to return to normal or a version of normal. 

That means “virtual” real estate will likely be with us for some time, at least in the short term. 

“I still think it comes down to how long does it all take for things to get back to normal,” he said. “Everybody has a risk and a price associated with that risk — I would encourage people to put the price on their own risk, and if there’s a number that works for them, great.”

And it’s possible, Lightbourn said, that some buyers with deep familiarity of a destination could even buy “sight unseen.”

In a place like Harbour Island, for example, which has a small, well-known collection of historic homes.

“People who are familiar with an area — people who to go to Harbour Island and they know the houses because they drive around and been there five or six times, and they see them come on the market and the sellers are motivated.”

— CJI

The post How Caribbean Real Estate Is Going Virtual appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Brooklyn Pride Parade, Puerto Rican Day Parade, Mermaid Parade cancelled amid pandemic

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Caribbean Moment: A Purple Sunset in St Croix

 

The sky is pink, then purple; the umbrellas and the palm trees darken against a twilight canvas. 

There’s nothing like sunset in the Caribbean, a ritual of renewal, a nod to a day enjoyed. 

Take yourself for a moment to Frederiksted, St Croix and the pool deck at The Fred boutique hotel; it’s a calm, tranquil 20 seconds of Caribbean sunset. 

See it in the latest Caribbean Moment below:

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A Caribbean Music Playlist That Will Take You to the Beach

 

Next to smell, there’s nothing like music to spark memories. So
while we can’t bring you the fragrance of Frangipani (or even suntan lotion),
these 15 songs capture the memory of times spent relaxing on Caribbean beaches,
drinking rum drinks at resort bars, and dancing at sunset on party boats.

Of course the whole list could be Bob Marley and the Wailers tunes — and we really would have no problem with listening to Bob all day long — but we opted to include a range of songs that you almost certainly have heard if you’ve been to the Caribbean in the last few decades but might not know much about the artist or even the name of the song playing as the background of your island vacation. Big up to all the artists and here’s hoping the music takes you back to good times in the Caribbean!

Hot Hot Hot — Arrow

Thanks to MTV, many Americans of a certain age know the remake of
this song by David Johansen (as Buster Poindexter) better than the original.
But the song was born of the genius of Arrow, a calypso and soca star from the
tiny Caribbean island of Montserrat.

Bam
Bam — Sister Nancy

Pioneering
female Jamaican dancehall singer Sister Nancy recorded this slow-burn classic
in 1982.

Sean
Paul – Temperature

Kingston,
Jamaica rapper Sean Paul topped the international charts with the driving beat
of this 2005 dancehall hit.

Three
Little Birds — Bob Marley and the Wailers

We
literally could have included the entire catalog of this band on the list — One
Love, Buffalo Soldier, Jammin’, Redemption Song (my favorite). But if there’s
one song you’re nearly guaranteed to hear any day in the Caribbean, this is
it. 

The
Boat Ride Anthem  — Jason Benn and Pelf

We
defy you to stay seated when this soca song starts playing and the winin’ start
on a Caribbean party cruise.

Dollar
Wine — Colin Lucas

I
hear this song and immediately think of a conga line. Listen carefully and
Trini soca artist Colin Lucas will even teach you how to “chip down de road.” The
faster tempo remake by Soca Boys as “One Cent, Five Cent, Ten Cent, Dollar” a
few years later was perhaps even more popular.

The
Harder They Come — Jimmy Cliff

This
song and the film of the same name are widely credited with introducing reggae
to the world.

Night
Nurse — Gregory Issacs

Gregory
Issacs’ velvet voice propels this laid-back paean to sexual healing.

Follow
the Leader — Soca Boys

Put
yuh hands in the air and follow along with this distinctly Caribbean twist on
the Electric Slide.

Jump
in the Line — Harry Belafonte

“Shake,
shake, Señora” remains an irresistible call to the dance floor nearly 60 years
after Jamaican-American legend Harry Belafonte recorded this rousing calypso
song.

It
Wasn’t Me — Shaggy

Shaggy’s
inimitable singing style makes any of his songs instantly recognizable,
including this irresistible tale of a playa who gets caught.

Chase
the Devil — Max Romeo

You
may or may not know this as the “put on the iron shirt” song. Jamaican reggae
artists Max Romeo says the shirt represents the human strength of spirit needed
to “cast out the devil” — perhaps right to outer space.

You
Don’t Love Me (No, No, No) — Dawn Penn

Sixties
rocksteady artist Dawn Penn scored a global comeback hit with this seductive
dancehall song in 1994.

Big
Bamboo — Horace Peterkin

Does
anything say Caribbean vacation like a calypso ode to sexual prowess sung by
the general manager (Horace Peterkin)
of a Sandals resort in Jamaica? We think not.

Pressure
Drop — Toots and the Maytals

This
1969 song by one of the kings of Jamaican ska and rocksteady music rode the
soundtrack for The Harder They Come to worldwide fame, and is still commonly
found on Caribbean resort playlists. The song title refers to the drop in
barometric pressure that occurs when a hurricane is approaching.

See the full playlist here on Spotify:

The post A Caribbean Music Playlist That Will Take You to the Beach appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Jamaica Creating Tourism Recovery Task Force

 

Jamaica is creating a “tourism recovery task force” in a bid to help the country’s industry recover from the coronavirus pandemic. 

The task force will consist of two layers of partners with a mission to “provide a recovery and growth stimulation framework for the sector,” according to a statement from the Ministry of Tourism. 

“We will be working on a hard 2-week drive, to get the framework of the recovery ready, for first discussion with a major international company. This company will be working with us to develop the technical aspect of the plan,” said Jamaica Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett. “We are going to be taking that plan to our partners. We want to create a new tourism after COVID-19 because we recognize the changes that are going to take place.”

Jamaica has also announced plans for a “cruise recovery program,” which will be chaired by Port Authority of Jamaica President and CEO Gordon Shirley. 

“The panel that we have established is a very eminent one, which includes some of the best minds in the cruise sector,” Bartlett said. “This will allow us to start putting protocols in place and begin engaging with our partners, to get that sector back on track as quickly as possible.”

In a move to help stakeholders during the crisis, the country has also announced a six-month moratorium on licenses and fees paid by tourism entities, according to Bartlett. 

The move covers tourism entities like resort cottages, apartments, villas, car rentals, bike rentals, watersports and craft traders, among others. 

Bartlett said he hoped the move would give “some level of reprieve and hopefully help with the cash-flow situation for a number of our partners.”

The moratorium will be reviewed “depending on the length of time it takes for the country to recover from the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,” according to the Ministry of Tourism. 

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