Brazilians making an economic mark
Suddenly, everything seems to be coming up Brazilian.
President Barack Obama will visit Brazil during his first South American trip in March and Brazil is Florida’s top trading partner. But Brazilians are also snapping up beachfront luxury properties and downtown Miami condos, investing in everything from real estate to Burger King, and shopping voraciously.
It’s as if a “swarm of grasshoppers” has
descended on South Florida, chomping through bargains from Dadeland to Sawgrass
Mills, one tour operator says.
“The trend now is everybody comes to shop,
shop, shop,’’ said Claudia Menezes, of Pegasus Transportation, which operates a
fleet of buses for conventional tours as well as the shopping excursions that
are so popular with Brazilians. “They’re buying up everything from $10 creams
at Victoria’s Secret to Luis Vuitton and Prada.’’
Testimony to Brazilian consumerism: When
Pegasus buses return Brazilians to the airport for their flights home, Menezes
says, they have to put on extra trailers behind to haul the loot.
To keep the Brazilian visitors coming,
American Airlines now offers 52 flights a week to Brazil from Miami
International Airport.
“Brazil is breaking all sorts of
records,’’ said Rolando Aedo, senior vice president of marketing for the
Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. “It has been our rock-star
market.’’
When all the numbers are tallied for 2010,
Miami-Dade expects to have rolled out the welcome mat for more than 500,000
Brazilian visitors who spent more than $1 billion.
That would move Brazil into the top spot
for international visitors, dethroning Canada, the perennial leader.
During the oil boom years, Venezuelans
were legendary for their dame-dos (give me two) ways and Latin Americans
have long loved South Florida shopping. But what sets the Brazilians apart is
there are so many more of them and they’re really big spenders.
To cater to the Brazilian crowd, the
tourism bureau has published shopping guides, maps and other materials in
Portuguese.
Even though Fort Lauderdale Hollywood
International Airport has no direct Brazilian flights, the number of Brazilian
visitors to Broward County has increased by 50 percent to 300,000 annually in
the past year. Brazil now ranks as Broward’s second most important foreign
market after Canada.
“They may enter though Miami, but they go
to Sawgrass Mills,’’ said Francine Mason, a spokeswoman for the Greater Fort
Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau.
And they also visit their relatives.
Broward County, especially the Pompano Beach/ Lighthouse Point area, is home to
the largest contingent of resident Brazilians in the state.
The Brazilian Consulate in Miami estimates
that there are 250,000 to 300,000 Brazilians living in Florida with the largest
populations in Broward and Miami-Dade counties and Orlando.
What’s spurring the Brazilian stampede?
Brazil’s economy is booming and expected
to become the world’s fifth largest by 2016. Unemployment is at record lows.
And perhaps most important, Brazil’s currency — the real — is extremely strong against the
dollar, making Florida trips and shopping sprees affordable for Brazilians.
Coming to South Florida for a week is
often cheaper for a Sao Paulo resident than a vacation in Northeast Brazil.
Real estate is extremely high in Brazil
right now — untouchable for many people,’’ said Claudia Bacelar, a Brazilian
who works as a Realtor at the Esslinger-Wooten office in Coral Gables.
Edgardo Defortuna, president and chief
executive of Fortune International, says, for example, that an apartment
equivalent to a three-bedroom unit at Jade Ocean in Sunny Isles Beach that goes
for $1.6 million might cost $2.5 million in Belo Horizonte, a state capital in
southeastern Brazil.
And there’s another reason so many
Brazilians are visiting: They just like it here.
“Florida has always been a favorite – the
warm tropical weather and the beaches with the benefit of the shopping and now,
of course, it’s so much more affordable,’’ Bacelar said. “When Brazilians come
here and I see how they shop, I’m in shock.’’
At Dolphin Mall near Miami International
Airport, for example, Brazilians are the top international tourists, urging
past Venezuelans for the first time last year, said Madelyn Bello Calvar,
director of sponsorship and marketing.
And they typically spend about three times
what local customers do, she said.
At Sawgrass Mills, Marcos Freire, the
assistant general manager, has watched with satisfaction as shoppers speaking
Portuguese flood the mall and buses full of Brazilian tourists in matching
T-shirts pull in.
Mall surveys show that Brazilians are the
most numerous international shoppers, followed by Colombians and Canadians. But
Freire says, “The Brazilians are way ahead.’’
As shoppers, he says, they are extremely
brand-conscious, loading down their carts with Nike, Adidas and Tommy Hilfiger
plus high fashion, televisions, video games, and the latest technology.
They know their way around American
retail, said Freire, who is originally from Rio de Janeiro. “They’ve done their
homework and they know where they’re going.’’
Menezes, whose company often runs shopping
tours that stop at Sawgrass, said the trend used to be that Brazilian groups
would ask for some time at the beach, Orlando or the Everglades and maybe a day
of shopping.
“Now we have some groups that are coming
four or five days just to shop,’’ she said. “This year for the first time we
even had shopping tours for Black Friday.’’
It’s not just hotels and stores that are
benefiting from Brazilians planting their green and yellow flag around South
Florida.
Real Estate — Real estate sales to
Brazilians also are booming. “Today, they’re the most important foreign
sector of the South Florida market,’’ Defortuna said. “During the past 12
months, they have come in very strongly.’’
So strongly that late last year, Fortune
International opened an office in Sao Paulo to market its own luxury
developments such as Jade Ocean as well as other projects it handles such as
Icon Brickell and Trump Hollywood.
“I have never seen anything like this —
such demand. I get calls and e-mails every single day with a new Brazilian
contact or lead,’’ said Fabiana Pimenta, a top Brazilian Realtor at Fortune.
About a quarter of all new Fortune sales
are now to Brazilians, Defortuna said.
They basically fall into two categories,
he says: high-end buyers who are buying for themselves — although it may be
their second, third or fourth home — and investors who tend to gravitate toward
properties in the Brickell and downtown Miami areas.
If they’re buying for themselves, they like beachfront properties in Miami Beach and the Sunny Isles Beach area, real estate agents say.
The apartment-buying spree also is having
a positive impact on other businesses.
Five years ago, Ornare, a high-end Brazilian
kitchen, bath and closet store, opened its first U.S. branch in Miami’s Design
District. And while the local housing market has slumped, Ornare’s business
hasn’t.
Its closets with leather doors, sculpted
bath fixtures and sleek, sophisticated kitchens have found a ready market here.
Increasingly, it’s Brazilians who are doing the buying.
Sales are up nearly 40 percent since last
year and now Ornare is planning showrooms in five other U.S. cities, says
Claudio Faria, director of Ornare Miami, which imports nearly everything in its
showroom from Sao Paulo.
In 2009, Brazilians accounted for just 5
percent of Ornare’s local sales. Now, it’s about 25 percent, Faria said.
Brazilian interior designer Mirtha
Arriaran, who has run a Miami interior design business since 1995, says that
one of her jet-setting clients recently purchased a Miami apartment as a 12th
residence.
“These Brazilians are very, very rich,’’
she said. “They are not looking for bargains. They are the type of people who
will pick out an apartment they like and then ask the price.’’
About 85 percent of Arriaran’s clients are
Brazilians, and these days with all their new condo purchases, she’s so busy
that her firm, MAS Interior Design, is not taking on new business.
But not all the Brazilian real estate
buyers fall into the ultra-rich category. “Now Brickell is very affordable for the
middle class,’’ says Bacelar. She recently sold several smaller apartments
there for just under $200,000 — with low maintenance fees, too.
Airlines — Two years ago, American
Airlines served just two Brazilian cities – Rio and Sao Paulo – from Miami. Now
it’s added four more: Brasilia, Belo Horizonte and Salvador with continuing
service to Recife.
“This is huge for us — to be in six cities
in one country,’’ said Martha Pantin, an American spokeswoman. “American Airlines
is very bullish on Brazil.’’
TAM , a Brazilian airline, also recently
added direct service several times a week from MIA to Brasilia and Belo
Horizonte to complement its daily flights to Sao Paulo, Rio and Manaus.
But the best may be yet to come. With the
2014 World Cup in Brazil and the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, American is
now negotiating to add extra flights to Brazil before and after the World Cup.
American believes Miami will be a transit
point for many people from around the world as they head to the sporting
events, says Pantin. “The World Cup,’’ she said, “also will introduce Americans
to new destinations in Brazil.’’
• The Florida/Brazil trade and business
connection — Brazil ranks as South Florida’s top trading partner as well as the
Sunshine State’s top trading partner. Florida’s merchandise trade with Brazil
during the first 11 months of 2010, the most recent statistics available,
topped $14.4 billion, a 27 percent increase over 2009 figures.
Enterprise Florida recently reopened an
office in Brazil. Its purpose is to not only promote Florida products and
services but also to attract Brazilian investors to Florida.
Brazilian companies Embraer, an aircraft
manufacturer, and Odebrecht, a construction firm, already have extensive
operations in South Florida, and last fall 3G Capital, a private investment
firm with Brazilian backing, acquired Burger King in a $4 billion deal.
Anumakonda Jagadeesh comments:
Yes. Brazil Economy is booming.
Here are more details:
Brazil is the largest national economy in Latin America, the world's eighth largest economy at market exchange rates and the ninth largest in purchasing power parity (PPP), according to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Brazil has a free market economy with abundant natural resources. The Brazilian economy has been predicted to become one of the five largest in the world in the decades to come, the GDP per capita following and growing. Its current GDP (PPP) per capita is $10,200, putting Brazil in the 64th position according to World Bank data. It has large and developed agricultural, mining, manufacturing and service sectors, as well as a large labor pool.
Here are more details:
Brazil is the largest national economy in Latin America, the world's eighth largest economy at market exchange rates and the ninth largest in purchasing power parity (PPP), according to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Brazil has a free market economy with abundant natural resources. The Brazilian economy has been predicted to become one of the five largest in the world in the decades to come, the GDP per capita following and growing. Its current GDP (PPP) per capita is $10,200, putting Brazil in the 64th position according to World Bank data. It has large and developed agricultural, mining, manufacturing and service sectors, as well as a large labor pool.
Brazilian exports are booming, creating a new generation of tycoons. Major export products include aircraft, electrical equipment, automobiles, ethanol, textiles, footwear, iron ore, steel, coffee, orange juice, soybeans and corned beef. The country has been expanding its presence in international financial and commodities markets, and is one of a group of four emerging economies called the BRIC countries.
Brazil's economy is diverse, encompassing agriculture, industry, and many services. The recent economic strength has been due in part to a global boom in commodities prices with exports from beef to soybeans soaring. Agriculture and allied sectors like forestry, logging and fishing accounted for 5.1% of the gross domestic product in 2007, a performance that puts agribusiness in a position of distinction in terms of Brazil's trade balance, in spite of trade barriers and subsidizing policies adopted by the developed countries.
The industry — from automobiles, steel and petrochemicals to computers, aircraft, and consumer durables— accounted for 30.8% of the gross domestic product. Industry, which is often technologically advanced, is highly concentrated in metropolitan São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Campinas, Porto Alegre, and Belo Horizonte.
Brazil is the world's tenth largest energy consumer with much of its energy coming from renewable sources, particularly hydroelectricity and ethanol; nonrenewable energy is mainly produced from oil and natural gas. A global power in agriculture and natural resources, Brazil experienced tremendous economic growth over the past three decades. It is expected to become a major oil producer and exporter, having recently made huge oil discoveries.
Brazil is the world's third largest aircraft producer (Source: Wikipedia).
Hello Everybody,
ReplyDeleteMy name is Mrs Sharon Sim. I live in Singapore and i am a happy woman today? and i told my self that any lender that rescue my family from our poor situation, i will refer any person that is looking for loan to him, he gave me happiness to me and my family, i was in need of a loan of S$250,000.00 to start my life all over as i am a single mother with 3 kids I met this honest and GOD fearing man loan lender that help me with a loan of S$250,000.00 SG. Dollar, he is a GOD fearing man, if you are in need of loan and you will pay back the loan please contact him tell him that is Mrs Sharon, that refer you to him. contact Dr Purva Pius,via email:(urgentloan22@gmail.com) Thank you.
BORROWERS APPLICATION DETAILS
1. Name Of Applicant in Full:……..
2. Telephone Numbers:……….
3. Address and Location:…….
4. Amount in request………..
5. Repayment Period:………..
6. Purpose Of Loan………….
7. country…………………
8. phone…………………..
9. occupation………………
10.age/sex…………………
11.Monthly Income…………..
12.Email……………..
Regards.
Managements
Email Kindly Contact: urgentloan22@gmail.com
Invest with 200$ and get a returns of 5,000$ within seven business working days.
ReplyDeleteWhy wasting your precious time online looking for a loan? When there is an opportunity for you to invest with 200$ and get
a returns of 5,000$ within seven business working days. Contact us now for more information if interested on how you can
earn big with just little amount. This is all about investing into Crude Oil and Gas Business.
Email: investmoneyoilgas@gmail.com ..+918447915629