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“This Is The Breaking Point” – Manhattan Home Sales Plunge Most Since 2009

5-4-2018 < SGT Report 86 551 words
 

from ZeroHedge:


For much of the past year, we’ve been carefully monitoring developments in the high-end of the world’s ritziest property markets – cities like New York, London and Hong Kong as well as tony suburbs like Greenwich, Conn. – for warning signs that America’s torrid post-crisis real-estate rally could be nearly exhausted.


As US home prices have rocketed to within a hair’s breadth (1%) of their highs from 2006, we’ve pondered the question of whether this is a “market top” or a “breakout.” The high end, ultimately, could be the final piece of this puzzle.



After all, conventional wisdom would have you believe that real-estate values in dynamic urban centers like NYC could never fall – at least not meaningfully. The perception, as we pointed out back in February, is that world-class cities will never go out of style, and their already high-densities deeply limits supply.



But that logic leaves one crucial question unanswered: What happens when too many people pile into a supposedly “safe” asset?


This is essentially the narrative that unfolded during the housing crisis, as millions of Americans assumed real-estate valuations could never retreat (beyond the occasional “gully”).


But even the world’s trendiest markets have their breaking points.


“Even with New York real estate prices, you do hit a point in which resistance sets in,” said Frederick Peters, CEO of brokerage Warburg Realty. “People are very anxious about overpaying.”


To wit, one month after we reported that Manhattan apartment sales were


For what it’s worth, analysts at UBS to Morgan Stanley have predicted that a correction is looming in the near future.


We recently reported that, according to data collected by a private company, Manhattan apartment sales plunged to a six-year low in January.


And now, Bloomberg is reporting that Manhattan home sales plunged the most since 2009 during the first quarter, according to a popular report compiled by Miller Samuel Inc. and Douglas Elliman Real Estate. The two firms tabulated that sales dropped 25% during the first quarter.


Meanwhile, Corcoran Group, which compiles its own report, recorded an 11% decrease. The drop was observed more or less evenly across the market, from the ultra-high end (which has been struggling for months) to studios and one-bedrooms.



The drop in sales spanned from the highest reaches of the luxury market to workaday studios and one-bedrooms. Buyers, who have noticed that home prices are no longer climbing as sharply as they have been, are realizing they can afford to be picky. Rising borrowing costs and new federal limits on tax deductions for mortgage interest and state and local levies also are making homeownership more expensive, giving shoppers even more reasons to push back on a listing’s price — or walk away.


While just a few years ago, bidding wars were the norm, “there’s nothing out there today that points to prices going up, and in many buyers’ minds, they point to being flat,” said Pamela Liebman, chief executive officer of brokerage Corcoran Group. “They’re now aggressive in the opposite way: putting in very low offers and seeing what concessions they can get from the sellers.”



Read More @ ZeroHedge.com



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