Friday, February 19, 2010

We've Moved!

NYC Apartment Market has Relocated!

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Friday, February 12, 2010

Gov. Paterson wants to impose mortgage tax on Co-ops


Governor Paterson wants to impose the NY state mortgage recording tax on Coops. Coops have been exempt from the state mortgage tax because coops are not considered "Real Property" they have been considered personal property.

Prior to 1989 coops were exempt from transfer taxes. Until a few years ago coop sales were private and not in the public records.

Financing a coop is technically not a mortgage but a coop loan. Coop owners purchase shares in a corporation that owns the building. Coop shareholders have a proprietary lease.

Current mortgage tax on condos and houses are between 2% and 2.175% depending on the mortgage amount. Below $500,000 or above $500,000. All purchases above $1 million are also subject to a 1% mansion tax.

If this new tax is approved most of the revenue will go to NYC. It may have an adverse effect on the value and sale prices of coops.



If you've been thinking about buying a coop and need financing, Now Is the Time before this new mortgage recording tax for coops is implemented. Contact Alfred Real Estate Today.

4th Quarter 2009 Market Report

News Update

Freddie Mac: Mortgage interest rates fall below 5 percent for third week this year

Thirty-year mortgage interest rates fell below 5 percent for the third week this year, according to a Freddie Mac survey released yesterday. For the week that ended Feb. 11, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage had an average 4.97 percent rate, down from 5.01 percent for the week earlier and from 5.16 percent for the same week last year. The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage was down to 4.34 percent from 4.40 percent during the week-ago period and 4.81 percent in the year-ago period. Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 4.19 percent, down from 4.27 percent last week, while their one-year counterparts were up to 4.33 percent from 4.22 percent one week ago. The drop in interest rates on fixed-rate mortgages "helps a number of homeowners to refinance their existing housing debt," said Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist at Freddie Mac, noting that the latest survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association found that more than two-thirds of mortgage applications have been for refinancing since the start of 2010. "In mid-June of last year, for example, 30-year fixed-mortgage rates topped nearly 5.6 percent. Currently, the monthly payments would be almost $77 per month lower on a $200,000 loan balance."


Existing home sales rise nationwide

Existing home sales rose in 48 states and the District of Columbia during the fourth quarter of 2009, according to a National Association of Realtors survey released today, with 32 states seeing increases in the double digits from the third quarter. Forty-nine states and D.C. saw sales rise year-over-year from their levels in the fourth quarter of 2009. Nationwide, total sales rose to a seasonally adjusted rate of 6.03 million single-family and condo units, thirty-two percent of which were distressed property units. The median single-family price was $172,900, a 4.1 percent drop from the fourth quarter of 2008. The nationwide number represents a 13.9 percent increase from the third-quarter 2009 figure of 5.29 million and a 27.2 percent rise from the 4.74 million sales registered for the year-ago period. "The surge in home sales was driven by buyers responding strongly to the tax credit combined with record low mortgage interest rates," said Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist, in a statement.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Manhattan’s Unique Style Lures Overseas Buyers

New York is one of the most desirable cities to visit on earth. From partying and posing, to shopping and star searching, there are unlimited factors of the city’s appeal. But does the property market have equal dazzle?

The answer is absolutely. Britons buying in the Big Apple look to Tribeca (the Triangle Below Canal Street), where artists discovered loft living in the Sixties, and SoHo (South of Houston Street), where the landscape has a European feel with cast-iron balconies and low-rise blocks built to house Italian immigrants arriving in the 19th century.

There is also Chelsea, a popular artistic and gay quarter, with loft buildings and brownstone family houses, and the legendary bohemian area of Greenwich Village. Prime Manhattan real estate close to Central Park attracts the wealthiest of buyers. And the prices are reputedly the lowest they will go.
"Prices are still down from a year ago, but they're improving. Unemployment has risen, but New York's labor market has been more resilient than the national average," says Walter Molony, of the National Association of Realtors, an umbrella body representing estate agents in America.

He forecasts the city's prices are likely to hold up - and possibly rise in the near future - because the number of new homes being built in NYC is a whopping 88.5 per cent below the long-term average.

Developers feel the same. In an interview for financial TV service Bloomberg, Barry Sternlicht - head of the Starwood firm, which specializes in building new apartments - says homes in his firm's new scheme at Battery Park are "selling like hot cakes".

Unlike many cities, where low cost wrecks are a thing of the past, New York has plenty of what Americans call 'fixer uppers' - old former industrial properties ripe for turning into homes. The Garment District on Manhattan's West Side still has plenty of examples for those wanting a renovation project.

New York estate agents also tip Washington Heights for price growth and, just across the Hudson in New Jersey, there are good-value homes to be found in the commuter town of Hoboken - popular with many British professionals who work in Manhattan.

One of the most dense, buzzing urban centers in the world, New York consists of five boroughs - The Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens and Staten Island. There are about 10 million residents across the city. The wider commuter area, stretching into New Jersey, has another 12 million.

And with prices as low as they are likely to go, this might be just the time to take a hearty bite of the Big Apple.

Celebs make NYC a Home away from Home

British-born actress Kim Cattrall has a Manhattan pad - appropriate enough, given her role as Samantha in Sex And The City. Close by are the homes of Coldplay’s Chris Martin and his wife Gwyneth Paltrow, and American heiress Nancy Shevell, girlfriend of Sir Paul McCartney. Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe is reported to have no fewer than three New York homes - and he’s only 20.

But thousands of other Britons live in more modest New York properties - and there is a vast infrastructure to help them settle in. The most famous hang-outs for expatriates include Soho House, a private members’ club and hotel in the grungy Meatpacking district, and the Red Lion pub, a live music bar based in Bleecker Street. There is also Tea & Sympathy, a restaurant and shop in Greenwich Village. It serves a full English breakfast, roast beef at lunch time and cucumber sandwiches for tea. Devon fudge, Hob-Nobs and videos of vintage TV sitcoms are on sale in the shop, which was founded 20 years ago by Nicky Perry, from Eltham, London. Kate Moss and Rupert Everett are regulars, and Davina McCall calls it ‘my favorite place in New York’.

Contact Alfred Real Estate Today

Apartment prices show annual decline for the first time in 13 years

The aughts saw more price appreciation than the 1980s or 1990s; number of sales drop for past two years.

Market reports released last week depict the spectacular rise of home prices over the past decade, but also the abrupt arrival of the real estate slump in Manhattan.

In 2009, Manhattan co-ops and condos saw year-over-year declines for the first time since 1996. The average 2009 apartment sold for $1.39 million, down 12.5 percent from the previous year. The median price dropped 11 percent to $850,000 from 2008, while the average price per square foot sank 14.2 percent to $1,073.



Other areas of the country have seen real estate activity and prices decline gradually over the past few years, but the Manhattan real estate market was still booming until the Lehman Brothers collapse in the fall of 2008. In fact, Manhattan prices set new records in 2008. That year, the average sale price of a Manhattan apartment reached a new ever high of $1.59 million, while the median was $955,000 and the price per square foot was $1,251, according to the report.

The number of sales sank 27.9 percent to 7,430 in 2009, from 10,299 in 2008 and 13,430 in 2007.
In 2009, the median sales price of a Manhattan co-op or condo surged 113 percent from $399,000 in 2000, reports say, while the average sales price climbed 96 percent from $710,778. In 2000, the average price per square foot in Manhattan was $522, about half of what it was in 2009.

The aughts saw more price appreciation than either of the two prior decades. The average sale price increased 96 percent throughout 2000s, but it grew only 26 percent in the 1990s.

One reason for the dramatic price increase was the mid-2000's construction boom of new condominiums. In 2000, co-ops represented 60 percent of the units that changed hands, but in 2009, that percentage had shrunk to 46 percent, while condos made up 54 percent. Co-ops still represent about three quarters of the total housing stock in Manhattan.
Because of the new construction, Manhattan's housing stock is more luxurious than it was a decade ago. Easy credit and speculation also helped fuel rising price in the last decade, even in the face of 9/11 and two recessions.


In addition, New York City itself was transformed during the late 1990s and 2000s as crime rates fell. Manhattan's enhanced reputation for safety has made it more desirable to foreign buyers, who in turn helped drive up real estate prices. The run-up in prices can also be attributed to the expansion of Wall Street during the 2000s.


Areas that saw the most price appreciation over the past decade were what brokers called "fringe" neighborhoods like Harlem. For example, the average sales price of a co-op or condo in Upper Manhattan (north of Central Park) in the year 2000 was $170,332, a figure that shot up 204 percent to $519,169 by 2009.

More established neighborhoods also saw prices rise, but not to the same extent. For example, the average price of an Upper East Side co-op rose 110.2 percent to $1.49 million in 2009 from $710,299 in 2000. Condo prices in the same neighborhood grew 100 percent to $2.11 million from $1.06 million in 2000.

An anomaly in the report was Battery Park City, which saw its prices quadruple as new condos were built with much larger units than had been found in the area in the past.

Meanwhile, townhouses saw a slow-but-steady appreciation over the decade, though their prices are also down from 2008.

The average sales price of Manhattan townhouse (defined as a one- to five-family home, delivered vacant) was $5.01 million, down 32 percent from a record $7.37 million in 2008 and up 51.6 percent since 2000. The median sales price was $3.4 million in 2009, down 31.2 percent from a record $4.99 million in 2008, and up 37.2 percent from 2000.

Contact Alfred Real Estate Today

Friday, January 29, 2010

Upper West Side Open Houses Draw Crowds


Despite the rain, cold and dreary weather open houses were mobbed this week on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Buyers are entering the market and they are buying. One pre-war 2 bedroom condo priced at $1,399,000 had about 40 people just 15 minutes after it opened.

About 30 people were at the 2 bedroom 2 bath apartments on the third floor of a post-war full service luxury building. One 2 bedroom condo that came on the market the beginning of the week at $1,150,00 is already in contract and the second open house was canceled. Many realtors planning on taking buyers back to see popular homes for a second time are too late. There is very little inventory in the $1M to $1.4M range.

What does it mean? Is it the Wall Street bonuses? Have we bottomed? Last weeks sell off in the stock market? Is New York the last market to decline the first to recover? We haven't had many foreclosures or sub-prime mortgages. The collapse of Lehman Brothers was what caused our market to decline. Prices are still down from a year ago but there is sales activity.

It's not about tax credits in this price range. Even first-time buyers looking at $1M+ apartments tend to have higher incomes than $125,000 single or $250,000 combined. The $6000 tax credit for current home owners is capped at an $800,000 purchase.

While there are all kinds of reports and gloomy economic studies, high unemployment and a poor national economy, we have to be honest about what we see. There are a lot of people with a lot of money buying real estate in Manhattan.