Selling prices for Dubai’s Luxurious Houses Jumped 27{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} in 1st Quarter
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Manhattan is no stranger to rental homes in the five-, even six- figure range — but across the East River, a neighbor is catching up. These days, Brooklyn is seeing a number of record-high rental listings hit the market.
Take, for example, a $40,000-a-month rental in Brooklyn Heights that listed with Sandra Cohen of Sotheby’s International Realty shortly before Thanksgiving. It’s a 4,000-square-foot condominium in One Brooklyn Bridge Park whose features include five bedrooms, a corner living room and a chef’s kitchen with Gaggenau appliances. Last month, broker Sarah Williams, the founder of SOCIETE Real Estate, listed a $36,000 spread at 130 Furman St. in Brooklyn Heights with four bedrooms — plus a private roof terrace with space for al-fresco dining and views of the Manhattan skyline. Available this June via Compass, a Greenpoint penthouse at 524 Manhattan Ave. with a triple-story living room, multiple outdoor spaces — including a landscaped roof deck — asks a cool $30,000.
Market data shows these aren’t just one-off examples. According to Brown Harris Stevens research, monthly rentals of $18,000 or more in Brooklyn have indeed seen an increase since 2021. So far this year — hardly two months into 2023 — the market has had 13 such listings with the average rent being $25,205 a month and the median at $22,000.
A peek inside the big-dollar rental at One Brooklyn Bridge Park, 360 Furman St., which has massive windows looking out to wide city views.EmpireOptix A view of that rental’s open layout.EmpireOptix Even the unit’s sleeping quarters have picture-perfect vistas.EmpireOptix
“Brooklyn is having its moment in the luxury sun,” said Compass agent David Chang, who lives in the borough and specializes in high-end rentals there. “It’s become a destination with renters moving in from the Lower East Side, the Village and Chelsea, and scooping up luxury properties.” At the same time, added Chang, limited inventory is driving rents up, and properties are being rented at or above market prices.
The rentals at Magnolia Dumbo, a luxury building on Front Street that launched in early 2022, are reflective of this mighty market presence. Jarrod Whitaker, the senior vice president of operations for RXR — the building’s developer — said that in less than 11 months, all 320 residences are fully leased for between one to two years. “We were estimating rents to be $81 a square foot but ended up getting $91,” he said. “This speaks to the vitality of the market.”
Sydney Blumstein, a Corcoran broker who has lived in Williamsburg for the last several years, said she’s personally cashing in on the Brooklyn rental market — which she describes as “on fire.” And she has experienced today’s sky-high prices for herself.
“My husband and I rented out our loft as of February 1st for the first time and are getting $24,000 a month,” she said — and StreetEasy shows that price is among the highest for a home ever rented in Brooklyn. Stretching an entire block, the 139 Powers St. property is a converted warehouse, and offers 4,200 square feet of interior space and an additional 2,500 square feet outdoors. It listed in November for a cool $35,000 per month, as The Post reported, which at that time made it Brooklyn’s priciest rental home on the market.
Blumstein said that she has seen many more pricey rentals of late in Brooklyn than she ever has before — and even at different price levels than the tippy-top of the market, these homes are still fetching higher sums of money.
Blumstein and her husband just rented out this boho-chic Williamsburg home for one of the priciest sums Brooklyn has ever seen.Rachel Kuzma/REPN for Corcoran The Powers Street pad was once a warehouse.Rachel Kuzma/REPN for Corcoran A dining area in the Williamsburg rental.Rachel Kuzma/REPN for Corcoran A bedroom with beamed ceilings.Rachel Kuzma/REPN for Corcoran A yellow-painted seating area with beamed ceilings.Rachel Kuzma/REPN for Corcoran
“Properties that are being relisted are going for double in some instances compared with the last time they were on the market,” she said. “I’m about to list a 2,000-square-foot loft in Clinton Hill that rented for $4,000 a month, but this time, the asking price is $8,000. I have no doubt that it’s going to rent.”
The top end of the market aside, prices for Brooklyn rentals overall appear to have reached peak levels.
According to data from Corcoran, the median rent in Brooklyn was $3,695 in January 2023, up 5{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} from December and 23{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} year-over-year. The average rent was $4,220, a 25{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} increase compared with a year ago. What’s more, January was the 16th consecutive month of year-over-year rent growth in the borough.
In another data point, research from Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel’s most recent rental report shows that the average rental price in Brooklyn in January was $4,165, a record high since 2008. That’s up 31.7{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} from a year ago, the highest increase in history for Brooklyn, said Miller Samuel president and CEO Jonathan Miller, and 23.7{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} above pre-pandemic rents.
“Rents are high because mortgage rates are high,” Miller said of today’s interest rate climate amid a battle against languishing inflation. “People that are priced out of the purchase market are going to the rental market, and that’s why it’s historically high.”
In addition, Miller said that new development in Brooklyn has been focused on luxury rental buildings, which drive prices up. “These buildings are highly amenitized and upscale, and that means higher rents,” he said.
A look inside the big-dollar 130 Furman St. rental.Evan Joseph The unit asks $36,000 per month.Evan Joseph An outdoor view of the home.Evan Joseph
StreetEasy economist Kenny Lee agrees. The company’s research indicates that the median rent in Brooklyn is $5,148 — 20{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} higher than a year ago. “This increase is largely driven by a rise in new luxury developments entering the market last year, which contributed to one in five new top-tier rental listings in 2022,” he said.
Examples of these swanky developments include Eagle + West in Greenpoint, featuring a co-working center and even a stage for karaoke. Meanwhile, Torre House in Brooklyn Heights has three swimming pools, including one on the rooftop with city views.
Lee said that the neighborhoods with the most top-tier rentals are Downtown Brooklyn, Greenpoint and Williamsburg — and that, at 9,446 units, current rental inventory is 30{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} below the average inventory level in 2019. That number is down just 0.1{61deb032f2f3cf43cd91e0a97f017aab274ddbb67b74a5b085bd003b9ac3cd96} from last year.
The ability to afford super-luxury rentals aside, Lee and other industry experts said that Brooklyn has a number of appealing qualities that make it a desirable place to live. Lee points to the greater square footage that the borough’s properties offer per dollar, compared with those in Manhattan. “They allow for more space for home offices for hybrid and remote workers,” he said.
Blumstein said the outdoor space that residents get is a big attraction. “There aren’t as many tall buildings, and you see more sky. You’re still in the city but have a slightly suburban flavor,” she added.
Speaking from personal experience, Blumstein is also a fan of the sense of community. “Your neighbors in Brooklyn are usually friendly and happy to socialize or help out if you’re in a bind,” she said. “You’re never alone trying to find your own way, and there’s a reassurance in that.”
Prices easing as sellers adjust to new realities of market, Sotheby’s says
Luxury real estate prices are expected to be lower in 2023.Photo by Tyler Anderson/National Post
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Canada’s luxury real estate market cooled significantly last year, setting 2023 up for a buyer’s market across much of the country as prices come down.
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Both buyers and sellers retreated from the luxury housing market in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal in 2022, creating new benchmarks for prices and sales, Sotheby’s International Realty Canada said in a report out this morning. Calgary was the one outlier, buoyed by strong migration and a healthy economy.
But for the rest of Canada, high inflation, rising interest rates and fears of a recession dampened market activity as sellers held onto their properties in hope of better conditions, and buyers sat on the sidelines waiting for prices to come down.
The Greater Toronto Area’s luxury market statistics tell the tale of 2022. Last year, sales of all homes over $4 million declined 24 per cent from 2021, and sales of homes above $10 million — known as ultra-luxury properties — fell 29 per cent. Sales of residences costing $1 million or more also declined by 28 per cent.
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That was evidence of buyers’ willingness to sit back and wait for better prices and more properties to hit the market, even as demand for homes remained strong, Sotheby’s said.
But buyers won’t be deterred for much longer. As inflation slowed at the end of the year, the appetite for homes became harder to ignore — just in time for the market to shift in favour of buyers. That means prices will ease because sellers have adjusted to the new realities of the market, Sotheby’s said.
“By the end of the year, luxury housing segments in several major metropolitan areas were on the brink of buyers’ market conditions, while others had clearly shifted into this territory,” Don Kottick, chief executive of Sotheby’s said in a news release. “The market is now on the verge of another important adjustment, this time in terms of pricing.”
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Sotheby’s expects prices to be lower than the heady days of 2021 this year, even as listings grow. That dynamic will likely draw more buyers back into the market, eager to snap up properties at valuations they’ve long been waiting for.
“Prices will shift to meet current realities,” Kottick said. “This will start to unlock long-awaited opportunities for buyers and upsizers to purchase homes that meet their lifestyle needs as they acclimatize to the market.”
Activity in Vancouver’s luxury real estate market is expected to bounce back as a result, Sotheby’s said. As interest rates pushed mortgage rates higher last year, Vancouver’s buying frenzy cooled, and the region experienced major declines in sales. Homes priced above $4 million and $10 million languished on the market as buyers pulled back, and sales volumes were 30 per cent and 46 per cent lower, respectively, than they were in 2021. Sales of homes above $1 million fell 29 per cent. Prices also eased, and are expected to continue to moderate in the coming months.
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In Montreal, conditions were more balanced last year. Bidding wars, which were the norm in 2021, became less common and homes took longer to sell. Sales of residences priced above $1 million declined 18 per cent, but houses above $4 million eked out a two per cent gain in sales. Sotheby’s expects prices to cool some more in 2023, but not so much that the market tips in favour of buyers. Sellers will also benefit from a balanced market, the report said.
Meanwhile, Calgary’s market showed continued signs of strength as people flocked to Alberta from other parts of the country. Sales of homes priced higher than $1 million rose by 16 per cent compared to 2021, and sales of homes above $4 million grew by 50 per cent. That put the region in sellers’ market territory, and Sotheby’s expects the market to keep gaining strength in the first part of this year. But in good news for buyers, conditions should become more balanced as new listings come online.
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Still, inventory will remain a problem in some big cities, including Vancouver and Toronto, as demand outstrips supply, Kottick said. And as more immigrants flow into the country, demand will only increase. That means prices aren’t likely to get as low as some buyers may have hoped.
“Although housing prices are expected to adjust downward to realistic market norms in several major metropolitan areas, pent-up demand for housing mobility as well as anticipated population gains from immigration will continue to support housing values in the long term,” the report said.
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Canada’s main measure of inflation dropped to its slowest rate in almost a year, a positive change, but one that will complicate the Bank of Canada’s decision on what to do with interest rates, writes the Financial Post’s Kevin Carmichael.
The consumer price index increased 6.3 per cent from December 2021, down from 6.8 per cent the previous month and the smallest year-over-year increase since the index rose 5.7 per cent in February 2022, Statistics Canada reported on Jan. 17. The drop in the headline number was mostly the result of lower gas prices. Excluding food and energy, inflation rose 5.3 per cent from December 2021, down only marginally from 5.4 per cent in November.
What does that mean for interest rates? Read the full story to find out more.
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NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh will deliver a keynote address to his caucus during their three-day retreat in Ottawa
The standing committee on government operations and estimates meets to discuss a request to undertake a study of contracts awarded to McKinsey & Company
Adam van Koeverden, parliamentary secretary to the minister of health and to the minister of sport, on behalf of Francois-Philippe Champagne, minister of innovation, science and industry, will be announcing the recipients of support from INOVAIT’s Focus Fund
The Economic Club of Canada hosts an event called “Challenges and Opportunities Facing the Future of Canada’s Natural Resources”
Francis Drouin, parliamentary secretary to federal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau, tours the Toronto laboratory of Genecis Bioindustries. The company, one of six finalists in the Novel Technologies Stream for the Food Waste Reduction Challenge, is converting food waste into compostable and biodegradable plastics
Melanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and James Cleverly, Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs of the United Kingdom will hold a press conference during his visit to Canada
Dan Vandal, Minister for PrairiesCan, will outline federal support to ensure the continued growth and competitiveness of technology and technology-enabled Calgary businesses as they expand and create new jobs for Albertans
Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau travels to the United Kingdom to meet counterparts and deliver remarks at the International Grains Council Grains Forum and then to Germany to attend the Berlin Agriculture Ministers’ Conference 2023
Today’s data: Canadian industrial product and raw materials price indices; U.S. retail sales, producer price index, industrial production and capacity utilization, NAHB housing index, business inventories
Earnings: Kinder Morgan Inc., Charles Schwab, Alcoa Corp.
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The stock market has been rocky, but that doesn’t mean you should stop investing — you might just want to branch out. This is where alternative investments come in. Alternative investments — assets other than stocks — can help hedge against inflation, protect your wealth from downside risk and potentially enhance portfolio returns. Thanks to one disruptive startup, an alternative investment has finally been made accessible to everyday investors —fine art. Our content partner MoneyWise explains how to invest in art.
Today’s Posthaste was written by Victoria Wells (@vwells80), with additional reporting from Financial Post staff, The Canadian Press, Thomson Reuters and Bloomberg.
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