National Post (National Edition)

Manhattan home sales slide most since 2009

- Bloomberg

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 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.”

Corcoran Group released its own Manhattan market report Tuesday, showing an 11-per-cent decrease in completed purchases and a 10-per-cent drop in sales that are pending.

For sellers, to reach a deal in the first quarter was to accept a lower offer. Fiftytwo per cent of all sales that closed in the period were for less than the last asking price, according to Miller Samuel and Douglas Elliman. Buyers agreed to pay the asking price in 38 per cent of deals, but often that figure had already been reduced. Combined, the share The drop in Manhattan home sales spans from the highest reaches of the luxury market to workaday studios and one-bedrooms. Buyers are realizing they can afford to be picky, and are haggling over deals, industry experts say. of deals without a premium was the biggest since the end of 2012.

“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.”

Peters said that these days, he gets dozens of emails a day announcing price reductions for listings. And buyers are haggling over all deals, no matter how small. In a recent sale of a two-bedroom home handled by his firm, a buyer who agreed to pay US$1.5 million — after the seller cut the asking price — suddenly demanded an extra US$100,000 discount before signing the contract. They agreed to meet halfway, Peters said.

Buyers also are finding value in co-ops, which in Manhattan tend to be priced lower than condos. Resale co-ops were the only category to have an increase in sales in the quarter, rising two per cent to 1,486 deals, according to Corcoran Group. Sales of previously owned condos, on the other hand, fell 12 per cent as their owners clung to prices near their record highs, the brokerage said.

The median price of all sales that closed in the quarter was US$1.095 million, down 5.2 per cent from a year earlier, brokerage Town Residentia­l said in its own report. Three-bedroom apartments saw the biggest drop, with a decline of seven per cent to a median of US$3.82 million, the firm said.

Prices fell the most in the lower Manhattan neighbourh­oods of Battery Park City and the Financial District, where the median slid 15 per cent from a year earlier to US$1.21 million, according to Corcoran Group. On the Upper West Side, the median dropped eight per cent to US$1.1 million.

Neither new developmen­ts nor resales were spared from buyer apathy. Purchases of newly constructe­d condos, which continue to proliferat­e on the market, plummeted 54 per cent in the quarter to 259, Miller Samuel and Douglas Elliman said. Sales of previously owned apartments dropped 18 per cent to 1,921.

The plunge in transactio­ns is actually a good thing, in that it may serve as a wake-up call for more sellers to scale back their price expectatio­ns, said Steven James, Douglas Elliman’s CEO for the New York City region.

“It sends the sellers a signal that you have to get more reasonable if you want my buy,” James said. “It’s like buyers said, ‘I’ve told you all along, but you wouldn’t listen! Now I have your attention, so let’s talk.’ ”

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