BajaNews
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Expatriate Americans find `gringolandia' in Baja California
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/news/world/15...
By Michael Martinez
Oct. 14, 2006
LA MISION, Mexico - Every weekend, Carmen Tetelboin joins the Baja boom.
After work on Fridays, the Los Angeles resident drives four hours across the border to Baja California, where life is so good and living so cheap, it
beats the other California, she contends.
Owning a condo on the coast, she and her husband are part of an American colony exploding during the past five years along 75 miles of pristine
beaches, cliffs and towns south of Tijuana. What's drawing them are oceanfront homes at a fraction of the multi-million-dollar prices on the U.S.
side.
A native of Chile who is bilingual and a U.S. citizen, Tetelboin jokingly calls this swath of Americans "gringolandia."
"I never speak more English than when I'm in Mexico," said Tetelboin, 51, an adviser to international students at UCLA.
Equivalent to a small city unto themselves, the Americans in Baja, who number about 250,000 according to one unofficial estimate, have created a
curious twist on the U.S. immigration crisis bedeviling Congress and the White House.
"We complain about Mexicans illegally crossing the border for a $6-an-hour job . . . in an attempt to take back the country, when in fact we're buying
Mexico one lot at a time," said Patrick Osio Jr., 68, of Chula Vista, Calif., a former consultant who leads conferences on Baja real estate.
Indeed, the high-rises and gated communities dotting the coast exude a United States ambience, advertising in big English signs - "Beachfront condos.
Models open here" - with San Diego or U.S. toll-free phone numbers. Even traffic signs on the coastal toll road are in English.
Last October, Christine McCusker and her husband, John, bought on first sight a 2,800-square-foot house for $450,000 that's a one-minute walk to the
beach in the Punta Piedra development. In Southern California, such a house would cost a few million dollars, she said.
"If I were to sit and think about a whole bunch of adjectives for Mexico, I have to think of beautiful, warm, I love it," said McCusker, 61, who with
her husband and two daughters operates two private grade schools in Temecula, Calif. "It's not for everybody, believe me, but they have to get past
that mentality of people on the street begging."
Mexico's constitution forbids foreign ownership of land within 62 miles of the border and 31 miles of the coast, but Americans have been able to get
around that ban thanks to the Mexican government's creation of real estate trusts in recent decades.
Designed to encourage foreign investment, the 50-year trusts are an agreement between a buyer, a Mexican bank and a seller. The bank trust holds the
land and lists the foreigner as the beneficiary; they're renewable for an additional 50 years, after which they can be bequeathed.
But what's really ignited the Baja buying spree is money created by the recent U.S. home refinancing binge, experts said. As they near retirement age,
Baby Boomers are leveraging cash from their homes and buying Baja properties as second or permanent homes.
Driving the boom south of the border are U.S. title insurance companies and U.S. mortgage companies, if the applicant has good credit, though many
Baja properties are bought with cash, experts said.
Former Baja California Gov. Ernesto Ruffo said the two Californias are blending: "Actually, the region is one, economically speaking."
But ripoffs and risks abound, as they have since several Americans were defrauded out of retirement homes in San Antonio Shores south of Tijuana in
the 1960s and later in 2000 when Mexican police evicted scores of American retirees in Punta Banda, near Ensenada, following a title dispute.
There's also the matter of establishing and maintaining legal residency. Mexican consulate spokesman Cesar Romero of Chicago acknowledged that many
Americans live illegally in Mexico by not obtaining or letting lapse the retiree visa, which must renewed annually. But Romero could provide no
figure. "I hear it's a very common practice," he said. "It's a problem there."
Crime remains a concern, too, so American enclaves employ shotgun-toting armed Mexican guards, who patrol the grounds at such places as Playa del Mar
Club Station, where Sandra Moffat, 58, lives year-round.
Formerly of San Diego, Moffat said she feels secure in the condo she bought 3 1/2 years ago, joined by her c-cker spaniel Cindy. But panic-stricken
U.S. friends often send her e-mails about Baja crime.
"I feel as safe here as in the States, and I have two hearing aids and I take them out at night and I'm completely deaf," Moffat said.
Potential perils haven't stopped boosters from holding seminars throughout California on how to buy Baja property, including one at UCLA in September.
As an indicator of Baja activity, more than 16,000 condos, houses and lots are for sale in present or planned projects, representing $4.1 billion, in
the 75 miles between Tijuana and Ensenada, said Gustavo Torres of RE/MAX Baja Realty. He estimates 250,000 Americans live in Baja, but experts say no
reliable official census figures exist.
Up to 80 percent of Baja sales are to Americans, mostly as second homes, and 10 percent of them are retired or living there permanently, said Nathan
Moeder, principal of the London Group Realty Advisors Inc. of San Diego.
So frenzied has been the buying that one real estate consultant, Tom Harkenrider, sold a $250,000 condo at Residences at Playa Blanca to a stranger
next to him on a flight from Los Angeles to Cabo San Lucas last year.
The buyer, Arvin Sarroca, 36, of Chino Hills, Calif., said he liked the cost and the ability to rent out the condo when he can't visit it.
"I know there were problems," Sarroco, a day spa owner, said of past real estate controversies. "But now they have a bank trust and I feel a lot more
comfortable now. And the security title (company) is in the United States."
If there are any emerging downsides, it's that fast profits have diminished, such as flipping properties for gains amounting to 30 percent a year,
experts say.
"The (profit) boom is over, but the market is strong," Moeder said.
Not everyone welcomes the newly arrived Americans, including some of the ex-pats who've been living in Baja for decades. The mass migration will raise
prices, they say.
"It's scary," said Maggi Wagner, 71, who moved to Rosarito 16 years ago. "A lot of people buy sight unseen . . . They don't know what they are getting
into. You don't know the true ownership of the land. It gets tricky down here."
Many local Mexicans dislike how open beaches are now sealed off by the American communities, said Juan Manuel Higuera, 22, whose family has owned a
beachfront house in Ensenada for 50 years and has rejected Americans' buyout offers.
"People say, `Oh, here's another new house, but it's the gringos,'" Higuera said. A cigar store clerk, he added that American dollars have been good
for business, however.
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bancoduo
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Bruce R Leech
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Ho hum.
Bruce R Leech
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Cypress
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The whole world is for sale! One parcel at a time, if you've got the $. A big money man was buying property. He was only interested in property that adjoined
his. Eventually that would include the whole planet.
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MrBillM
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No News
Simply a natural extension of what has been going on for over thirty years now. The growth has accelerated, of course, and it appears that
exponential growth in foreign (mostly Gringo) investment will continue to be the case long into the future.
No amount of hand-wringing or tears will slow or stop the inevitible. Money Always speaks the loudest.
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