Market Cooldown Spares Most Expensive Homes
May 28, 2006
By TROY MCMULLEN, Wall Street Journal
Despite growing indications of a cooling housing market, one niche continues
to sell briskly - multimillion-dollar homes.
During the past few months in the overall U.S. real estate market, more homes
have crowded the market and sales volumes have fallen in areas from Houston to
Boston and Washington, D.C. Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored provider of
mortgage-loan funding, predicts that total home sales this year will be down
about 7 percent from 2005's record levels. Yet one area of the market appears
immune to all that: In many locations, homes on the ultrahigh end of the price
scale - $3 million and up - have been selling in increasing numbers.
In San Francisco, 18 homes in that range sold in the first quarter, up from
15 in the same period last year, according to real estate information service
DataQuick. In Jackson, Wyo., that number rose to 21 homes from 17, according to
Jackson Hole Real Estate and Appraisal. Higher up the scale, 10 homes at $5
million or more in Palm Beach, Fla., sold in the first quarter, up from eight
last year, the county assessor's office says.
One factor in the growth could be that median prices of all homes have risen,
pushing more homes into the luxury end. Also, inventory is up across the board.
But at a time when the overall number of home sales has declined in many
markets, the number in the ultra-high range has continued to grow. One possible
message: Just as it is often said that the rich aren't like the rest of us, the
real estate market of the rich appears to bear a decreasing resemblance to the
one that most Americans experience.
Homes at $3 million and up represent less than 2 percent of the overall market,
the National Association of Realtors estimates. Activity at this small upper end
has traditionally been a leading indicator for the broader market, says Gregory
Heym, chief economist for the New York real estate brokerages Brown Harris
Stevens and Halstead Property. Now, he says, there may be less of a connection
between the two segments. The stock market has created new wealth, and the
number of millionaires has grown, so more buyers are paying in cash. (The
National Association of Realtors found that 8 percent of home buyers paid in
cash last year, up from 6 percent in 2003.) That has left luxury buyers mostly
insulated from economic factors, such as rising short-term interest rates.
Mark Zandi, chief economist at the forecasting firm Moody's Economy.com, says
the segment of high-end buyers "won't be immune from the unfolding travails of
the rest of the market, but it will weather those difficulties much better than
it has historically."
Walter Molony, a spokesman for the National Association of Realtors, says the
highly volatile high-end market serves as a poor market indicator. Activity
among first-time home buyers, he says, is more telling. "That segment provides
liquidity for people to be able to trade up to larger homes," he says. "Without
strong entry-level activity, the market would sink."
When Todd Michael Glaser listed his 11-bedroom Miami home in February, overall
sales volume in the city was slipping - sales fell 21 percent for the month from
a year earlier. But he was not concerned. He listed it for $40 million, well
above Miami-Dade County's record single-family home sale of $27.5 million in
1999.
Glaser, a 41-year-old real estate investor, figured the property would sell,
based on its amenities and location. The 20,000-square-foot home is one of the
biggest on North Bay Road, where neighbors include Billy Joel and Matt Damon. A
month after hitting the market, it went under contract for purchase. Brokers
with knowledge of the deal put the price at more than $30 million, although
Glaser wouldn't reveal the number.
In Los Angeles County, 217 homes priced above $3 million sold in the first
quarter, up from 114 in the same period last year, according to Cecelia
Kennelly-Waeschle of Sotheby's International Realty. That is the biggest
first-quarter jump since the firm started tracking sales in 1988. For the same
period, the number of all sales in the county fell 10.3 percent, according to
DataQuick. Two homes priced above $10 million sold in Santa Barbara, Calif., in
the first quarter - including a $28.5 million, 17-acre oceanfront property to
actor Kevin Costner - up from one a year earlier.
Some affluent buyers don't limit themselves to what's on the market. When Henry
Kravis, managing partner of New York-based Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, went
shopping for a Palm Beach house in January, he didn't like any of the available
properties. His broker, Lawrence Moens, identified a property that wasn't for
sale, but fit Kravis' criteria: a 15,255-square-foot home on five acres along
Lake Worth. "I just knocked on the door, and said, 'I've got a buyer willing to
pay a lot of money for your home,'" Moens said. A few weeks later, the deal
closed for $50 million, public records show.
Not all markets are seeing a surge in high-end sales. In Manhattan, 212 homes
priced above $4 million sold in the first quarter, down from 226 in the
year-earlier period, according to Brown Harris Stevens. Appraisers say
apartments are staying on the market longer.
Even where sales are falling, confidence has not always flagged. On the Nevada
side of Lake Tahoe, sales of homes priced above $1 million fell 35 percent in
the first quarter from a year earlier, according to Chase International Realty.
That didn't stop Tom Gonzales from raising the price on his home in Incline
Village, Nev. After staying on the market for a year at $60 million, he raised
the price on the 4.5-acre property to $65 million last month to account for the
upkeep he has paid. "I don't think there's a shortage of people looking for a
property like this," said Gonzales, 61, who co-founded the software company
Commerce One.
Yet in Fairfield County, Connecticut, Lake Forest, Ill., and San Diego County,
brokers say many sellers are trimming prices amid a glut of pricey homes. Writer
Jane Green and her husband, bank executive David Burke, cut the price of their
Westport, Conn., property by $1 million after it sat for eight months at $5
million. The property sold in January for $3.9 million, public records show.
|