
Florida housing market on fire again after shock election result is driving millionaires out of city
Realtors say they have already been inundated by calls from wealthy clients seeking to relocate to the Sunshine State after Mamdani's surprise victory.
Mamdani handily defeated former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in Tuesday's election on a platform of taxing the super rich.
Prior to the result, billionaires Bill Ackman and John Catsimatidis warned that the 33-year-old upstart's victory could lead to an exodus of the wealthy, with Catsimatidis vowing to shutter his chain of grocery stores.
Now celebrity real estate broker Ryan Serhant has revealed to the New York Post that his number one job following Mamdani's win will be, 'moving people from New York to Florida. Again.'
'Based on the results, clients are going to hold off on making any kind of investment in New York City,' Serhant said.
Minutes after Cuomo's concession, Serhant and other real estate agents told the Post they were flooded with calls from clients who wanted to walk away from deals to buy in the Big Apple.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis also cheekily acknowledged the potential upside for his state after a poll emerged which showed that Mamdani surging ahead.
'Just when you thought Palm Beach real estate couldn't go any higher,' wrote on X.
Florida has long been a haven for the ultra rich thanks to the absence of any income tax.
But now New York-based venture capitalists, founders and bankers are even reportedly looking at distant getaways like Uruguay and Milan if Mamdani wins the general mayoral election in November.
Ackman, a hedge fund manager who supported President Donald Trump, has become one of the loudest voices decrying Mamdani's upset victory.
Ackman, like other billionaires, say Mamdani's policies will lead to capital flight of epic proportions.
'His policies would be disastrous for NYC. Socialism has no place in the economic capital of our country,' Ackman wrote in a long post on X early Thursday morning.
'The ability for NYC to offer services for the poor and needy, let alone the average New Yorker, is entirely dependent on NYC being a business-friendly environment and a place where wealthy residents are willing to spend 183 days and assume the associated tax burden,' he added.
Billionaire John Catsimatidis threatened to relocate or sell his New York City-based supermarket chain Gristedes in the event Mamdani won in response to his plans to create city-run grocery stores.
Now that Mamdani's victory is nearly assured - the results won't be officially confirmed until July 1 due to the city's ranked choice voting system - Florida real estate agents are seeing a surge in interest.
'The amount of lifelong New Yorkers texting me [about a move to Florida] is close to shocking,' Nathan Zeder, a broker who works at the Jills Zeder Group, told the Post.
The real estate group, based in Fort Lauderdale, has sold about $1.8 billion worth in property in Florida so far this year.
'People are frightened and over the next three to four months we're going to see a lot of people consider South Florida again - it's going to be a COVID level of interest,' Zeder said. 'These are people who can afford to move with relative ease.'
Serhant doesn't believe it's a foregone conclusion that Mamdani will ascend to the mayor's office, as there is a monied coalition forming that is expected to support incumbent Mayor Eric Adams.
Following his corruption charges that were later dropped by the Trump administration, Adams found it to be untenable to run as a Democrat.
He dropped out of the primary race in April and chose to run for another term as an independent.
'We'll see what happens now - you're going to see the real estate and investment community back Adams,' Serhant said.
'People are frightened and over the next three to four months we're going to see a lot of people consider South Florida again - it's going to be a COVID level of interest,' Zeder said
There is also the question of whether Cuomo will decide to mount an independent campaign himself, something he has not ruled out.
If Mamdani were to be defeated in the general election, it could resemble what happened in 2021 to India Walton, a socialist candidate who defeated centrist Byron Brown in the Democratic primary for Buffalo mayor.
Months later, Walton lost the general to Brown, who initiated a successful write-in campaign.
While New York City figures out its future, Serhant pointed out that, 'there are plenty of other places to live' and that his agents in the Sun Belt have been busy since Mamdani's win.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Finextra
27 minutes ago
- Finextra
Barclays follows HSBC out of the Net Zero Banking Alliance
Barclays has followed HSBC in withdrawing from the Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), claiming that the departure of a host of other global lenders means the organisation "no longer has the membership to support our transition". 1 Founded in 2021, the UN-convened NZBA requires members to commit to "transition the operational and attributable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from their lending and investment portfolios to align with pathways to net-zero by 2050 or sooner". At its peak it had around 150 members, including most of the world's largest banks. However, that number has dwindled in the last few months. At the beginning of 2025, ahead of Donald Trump's return to the White House, a host of US banks, including JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citi, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo, pulled out of the global climate-focused alliance. The American banks quit amid attacks from Republicans on "woke" capitalism, with the House Judiciary Committee, led by Republican Jim Jordan, claiming that financial environmental alliances have created "a climate cartel". Now, UK-headquartered HSBC and Barclays have joined their US counterparts. Barclays says it is committed to its "ambition" to be a net zero bank by 2050. Says a statement: "Our targets to mobilise $1 trillion of Sustainable and Transition Financing and for financed emissions remain unchanged. We continue to work with our clients on their transition, finance the transition and scale climate tech, while helping to ensure energy security for our customers and clients." Earlier this week, the CEO of Standard Chartered, Bill Winters, hit out at banks that have rowed back on their climate commitments. 'People that said a lot of stuff, but [when] it was fashionable to say it, [and] who are saying either nothing or the opposite now: shame on them,' said Winters, according to the Guardian.


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Corporation behind funds for PBS and NPR says it's ending operations after Trump cuts
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting says it will wind down its operations after the Trump administration and Congress slashed its funding. The organization funds PBS and NPR, as well as more than 1,500 local TV and radio stations. 'Despite the extraordinary efforts of millions of Americans who called, wrote, and petitioned Congress to preserve federal funding for CPB, we now face the difficult reality of closing our operations,' Corporation for Public Broadcasting President and CEO Patricia Harrison said in a statement.


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Jury says Tesla must pay $329 million for a deadly crash involving Autopilot
A Miami jury ordered Elon Musk 's car company on Friday to pay $329 million to victims of a deadly crash involving its Autopilot driver assist technology, opening the door to other costly lawsuits and striking a blow to Tesla 's reputation for safety. The federal jury held that Tesla bore significant responsibility because its technology failed and that not all the blame can be put on a reckless driver, even one who admitted he was distracted by his cell phone before hitting a young couple out gazing at the stars. The decision comes as Musk seeks to convince Americans his cars are safe enough to drive on their own as he plans to roll out a driverless taxi service in several cities in the coming months. The decision ends a four-year long case remarkable not just in its outcome but that it even made it to trial. Many similar cases against Tesla have been dismissed and, when that didn't happen, settled by the company to avoid the spotlight of a trial.