"Analysts say there's more trouble ahead in South Florida. Buyers insist prices still are too high as the number of homes for sale continues to pile up. Lenders also are reducing the pool of eligible buyers by tightening credit standards after the subprime mortgage meltdown.
Most forecasts say the housing market won't start to improve until sometime next year.
At the end of May, Broward had more than 47,500 homes and condominiums on the market, according to the Miami-based Keyes Co. That's up 27 percent from a year ago. At the current sales pace, it would take about seven years to sell all those properties."







