Monday, May 26, 2008

Price chopping hits the high end real estate market

This week's Barron's has the goods on the real estate slowdown finally hitting the high end market.

A SLICE OF THE GOOD LIFE -- THE REALLY GOOD LIFE -- HAS GOTTEN a lot more affordable lately. From Miami to Beverly Hills, homes with bowling alleys, theaters, steam rooms, heated decks, six-bay garages and other luxury must-haves are sitting on the market for at least twice as long as they did a year ago, and many sellers are doing what was, until recently, unthinkable: slashing prices. "Sellers are listening to offers they wouldn't have considered before," says Anita Bigelman, a broker/owner at Harding Realty in Miami. "We just sold a house for $10.5 million that was listed for $12 million. Before, that would have never happened."

After seeming impervious to the main market's woes of the past two years, homes in the $5 million-plus market have come down an estimated 10% to 15% in the past two quarters, and they are likely to shed another 10% or more over the next 12 months, according to Housing Predictor, a Destin, Fla., company that crunches data on 250 U.S. regions. "The high-end market is the fortress of the real-estate asset class, and the inner sanctum has been breached," says David Darst, chief investment strategist at Morgan Stanley.

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