1. As of June 2011, there were 10,559 homes available to purchase in Orlando though the multiple listings system (MLS). This is 35% lower than the June 2010 inventory (16,304). 
 
2. If you´re wondering why good deals seem harder to come by this year compared to last year, then look no further than the fact that Orlando condo inventory is down a dramatic 54% year on year. There are only a few hundred available to purchase.
 
3. The median sales price of a normal (i.e. non-foreclosed) property has increased an incredible 40% year on year, from $112,000 (£68,225) to $158,000 (£96,250). There has been a corresponding drop in the numbers of bank owned properties available in the open market.
   
4. The current pace of sales is equivalent to just 4.3 months supply, the lowest since 2005. A lot of prospective buyers will say that they are waiting for the bottom of the market. In my view they’ve already missed it.  
 
5. One in five Canadians are interested in US property, according to a new survey by BMO Bank of Montreal. Aside from the Canadian dollar appreciating 18% against the greenback in the past five years, the house prices in the locations they tend to favor in Florida have fallen far faster than the US average.
 
6. Between March 2010 and March 2011, almost a third of all Florida sales were to foreign buyers, up from 10% in 2007 (NAR). Generally speaking, the USA is still by far and away the largest recipient of foreign direct investment.
 
7. Orlando´s median home price (which is a good barometer for Florida as a whole) is now $94,950 (£57,850), the lowest level since 1997.
 
8. According to a recent report from the Harvey University Center for Housing Studies, 16 million new housing units will be needed to meet population growth and shifting demands. That would mean household formation, currently at 500,000 per year, will need to reverse its recent trend and get back to the 1,000,000+ per year we witnessed in the years previous to the financial crisis.
 
9. There is going to be a surge in demand for smaller homes, as an estimated 3.8 million baby boomers will be looking to downsize in the next decade. There are an estimated 50 million baby boomers in total and a disproportionate number of these will be attracted to the warm climate, low cost of living and quality of life of Florida. Immigration growth will also continue to stimulate demand.
 
10. Despite all the turmoil in the markets, there can be few who doubt that Florida is a diverse, wealthy and resilient economy with a safe and secure legal system that has been protecting foreign buyers for decades.