Luxury Home Foreclosures?
It appears that even the luxury real estate market will not fully escape the financial ravages that are taking down less-expensive neighborhoods.
Housing Wire asks: Has REO gone jumbo? To find out, they consulted with Integrated Asset Services, LLC in Colorado to see if foreclosures are moving up the real estate food chain. And though not all properties with loans in excess of the the conforming $417,000 are luxury homes, it appears that an increasing number of residences in that loftier lending arena are heading to short sale or foreclosure. In California, for example, IAS and Housing Wire saw 102 REO’s sell for more than $417,000 during April, compared to just 13 in April, 2007.
Anecdotally, we have seen a spike this past year in San Diego luxury homes that are closing as short sales (where more is owed on the property than what it is worth), or which end up as foreclosures and REO’s (real estate owned bank properties). We have also seen that it takes lenders far longer to reach an agreeable sales price compared to smaller loans–and that may be understandable.
On one hand, more money is at stake and greater care must be taken in reaching a fair valuation; on the other, carrying costs (taxes, insurance, maintenance, security and HOA fees) run far higher than ordinary REO’s. And that those are bills most lenders and services do not want to shoulder.
In a recent transaction in coastal Encinitas Ranch, Washington Mutual required two appraisals and took almost four months processing time before reaching an agreed-upon sales price. And during that time, foreclosure sale was delayed twice. The original loan amount was $1.2 million and the final sales price was $880,000. It was a major hit for the lender/investor , but costs would surely have been greater if this Encinitas home had gone to foreclosure.
We are currently involved with two other sellers who have loans exceeding $1 million and whose custom homes could end up as foreclosures if Countrywide and First Franklin investors cannot come up with pricing that reflects current San Diego market realities. Neither home is coastal (which would help prop up valuation) and neither have area comparable sales that would support pricing anywhere near what is owed on these homes.
Outside of our San Diego real estate practice with Villa Sotheby’s International Realty in Del Mar, we are hearing whispers that there will be more luxury short sales and REO’s before the real estate market recovers. And out of the confusion and delays in disposing of these luxury properties will be opportunities that luxury investors have been long awaiting.
And even the ultra-luxury real estate market appears to be experiencing some correction. In 2006, we wrote about Donald Trump’s luxury estate in Palm Beach being offered at $125 million. Recent reports say it sold at just $100 million.
What may have been painful for The Donald would have been a coup for the lucky buyer. I guess every market has silver linings–for someone.
You are correct in that everything is affected by the current credit crunch. The New Orleans market was not a bubble market in the the prices have been rather stable for 3-4 years. Many people moving form out of town this is this just like every other bubble market. I cannot remember seeing a foreclosure in my niche market of condos in the last 2 years.
I work a downtown market that is in demand and only saw one subprime loan in the past 200 sales leading up to the bubble pop! He happened to be a lender that dealt in sub-prime loans. He has since changed careers.
Yes thre are fewere homes and fewer buyers for the upper price ranges…now there is less credit and layoffs which means there is major trouble ahead for upper end homes.