Real Estate in the Richest Urban Market Tumbles
by Margaret Durst
Manhattan
apartment prices dropped for the first time since 2002 in the second
quarter as the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear
Stearns Cos. caught up to property owners in the nations most
expensive urban market.
The median
price fell 18.5 percent from a year earlier to $835,700, New York
appraiser Miller Samuel Inc. and broker Prudential Douglas Elliman
Real Estate said today. The number of sales plunged by half, the
most since Miller Samuel began keeping data in 1989.
The standstill
that existed after Lehman Brothers has been broken, and it was the
sellers that cried uncle, Pamela Liebman, chief executive
officer of New York-based property broker the Corcoran Group, said
in an interview.
Values are
falling broadly in Manhattan for the first time in the almost four-year
U.S. housing recession, with declines now seen in co-operatives
and condominiums of every size and price. Private-sector employment
in the city dropped by 91,200 jobs, or 2.8 percent, in the 12 months
through May as Wall Street losses and asset writedowns topped $1.4
trillion.
The price of
studio apartments declined 16 percent from a year ago to a median
of $405,000, according to Miller Samuel. One-bedrooms dropped 17
percent to $650,000 and two-bedrooms fell 23 percent to $1.27 million.
Three-bedroom units fell 37 percent to $2.35 million and four-bedrooms
plummeted 47 percent to a median of $3.92 million.
The Miller
Samuel-Prudential data reflect for the first time what sellers have
known for at least six months: The way to lure a buyer in the current
market is to cut your price.
Price Cuts
About 32 percent
of second-quarter listings included discounts from the original
asking price, according to StreetEasy.com, a Web site that gathers
Manhattan property listings from brokers. The deepest concessions
were on Central Park South and in the Financial District, where
list prices were pared by an average of 10 percent.
The sellers
who want to sell are reducing their prices, Liebman said.
The ones that arent, are either sitting on them overpriced
or waiting for another day.
James Rosenthal
didnt want to wait.
Rosenthal and
his Upper West Side neighbor on Riverside Drive near 77th Street
put their adjacent apartments up for sale in February 2008 for $6
million, hoping to lure a buyer that wanted to maximize the 3,800-square
feet of combined space.
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the rest of the article
July
4, 2009
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© 2009 Bloomberg
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