Manhattan Housing Prices Take a Dive

740-Park-Avenue-0409.jpgTough times across the river. The grim first quarter stats—volume down 60 percent, average co-op prices down 24 percent—may only be the tip of the iceberg. Particularly hard hit is the high end of the market, where 350 listings clog the slow-moving pipeline of $10 million-plus properties. (Official condo sales price numbers held up, but that’s only because of long-standing contracts finally closing; condos still on the market are at a virtual stand-still.) Those who need to sell are having to resort to massive discounts: One philanthropist recently had to cut the original asking price on her 17-room West End Avenue apartment of $13.5 million by 46 percent to get a deal done, and even then she had to chop the space up into two apartments to find buyers. Jonathan Miller points to the lack of available credit for big purchases—any loan above $729,750 is harder to get and more expensive than conforming loans. It certainly doesn’t bode well for more expensive properties in Brooklyn, but at least we have more condos and co-ops that can be bought using conforming loans!
Housing Slump Hits Manhattan [NY Times]
Photo by yujie

By Brownstoner |