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Thursday, December 11, 2008

The million-dollar-home dream goes poof!

If you paid seven figures, it probably isn’t worth that anymore; for buyers, $500,000 is the new $1 million.

By Prashant Gopal, BusinessWeek.com
The million-dollar-home dream goes poof! © BusinessWeek

Half a million dollars is, by almost any standard, a lot of money. But during the past few years, when credit was easy and regulations were loose, for many Americans it didn't seem like all that much.

That's because they were able to borrow huge amounts of money to buy new homes, often with little or nothing down. And while most homes sold in the United States, even at the height of the housing bubble, were $500,000 or less, rising prices in many major cities and affluent suburbs around the country pushed the cost of a three-bedroom home into seven figures or more.

But the gap between $500,000 and $1 million is more than monetary. It is also psychological. And during the recent boom years, Americans became reckless consumers, buying cars, houses, clothes and much more that they couldn't really afford. The dream of a $1 million home, once so distant, became tantalizingly reachable.

Now that has all changed. While certain pockets, such as Manhattan, San Francisco and Boston, remain high, real-estate prices around the country have fallen dramatically. The downside to this, of course, is that many people now owe more money on their home than their home is worth. The upside is that valuations are much more realistic — and affordable.

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Pain is spreading
That's because homes priced at half a million — and higher — are now also beginning to shrink in value. Initially, the properties hit hard by the subprime crisis were lower-priced dwellings more often than not bought by people with poor credit. But now, as too many people are experiencing, the pain is spreading even to people with good credit and higher incomes.

Until recently, sellers in wealthy neighborhoods were somewhat protected from the subprime credit crisis and were still drawing buyers with high salaries, good credit scores and a cushion of savings. But the problems worsened after global financial-services giant Lehman Brothers collapsed on Sept. 15. Credit markets froze, corporate giants laid off thousands of highly paid workers, and the stocks that padded the portfolios of the wealthy plummeted.

Even once seemingly impervious markets such as New York City, Florida and California, which had attracted well-heeled international buyers looking to take advantage of a weak dollar, began to struggle as the global economic slowdown washed over Europe, Asia and even the Middle East.

Asking prices for luxury homes nationwide have fallen 5.4% since Jan. 4, and such homes now stay on the market for 148 days, compared with 125 days at the beginning of the year, according to The Institute for Luxury Home Marketing's Luxury Market Report, which tracked prices through Nov. 7. The data — compiled by Altos Research — look at prices in the top 10 wealthiest ZIP codes in 30 large metro areas around the country.

Watching and waiting
"The entry level of the upper tier — the $500,000 price point and up — has been softening for a while," said Laurie Moore-Moore, founder and CEO of the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing, a Dallas-based group that trains high-end agents. "What we've also seen in the last month is huge uncertainty at the very top of the market. People want to know where are we headed, how serious [the downturn] is going to be, and what is the duration. There are enough questions that even at the top of the market, people are waiting and watching."

BusinessWeek.com put together a sampling of homes selling for about $500,000 in 17 of the most affluent communities across the nation. A few years ago, those homes would have likely commanded much higher prices.

Art Tassaro, a real-estate agent with Friedberg Properties in the wealthy New York suburb of Cresskill, N.J., said buyers have all but disappeared in the past few months. Sellers who want their home to move quickly need to be aggressive about pricing. One method is to average the three lowest sales prices in a given neighborhood during the past year and then discount that price by an additional 5%, he said.

"If it was bad before, it's worse now," he said.


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Of course, if you’re buying …
Grim times for sellers can be full of opportunity for buyers, especially those with cash, Tassaro said.

John Marcell, president of Better Mortgage Brokers in Upland, Calif., said sellers are discounting prices significantly in order to make a sale. Most sales are so-called short sales, where the lender agrees to accept less than the outstanding loan amount to avoid a foreclosure.

High-end homes are just sitting on the market in his area, he said. Entry-level homes now make up the market's strongest segment, because first-time purchasers can take advantage of low prices without having to worry about unloading their existing homes, he said.

"The only sales of million-dollar homes are foreclosures," Marcell said.

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