Sunday, October 31, 2010

Val Kilmer's Pecos River Ranch Back On The Market

Earlier this year actor Val Kilmer fought for the right to use get his Pecos River Ranch in New Mexico approved as a bed and breakfast. After he made a public apology for some unfavorable comments he made about life in New Mexico including a quote in Rolling Stone magazine about how he lived in "the homicide capital of the Southwest," New Mexico's San Miguel County decided the nearly 6,000 acre Pecos River Ranch can operate as a bed-and-breakfast retreat. But now, just a few months later the ranch, which was on the market in 2009 for $33 million, is back up for sale with a price cut. The ranch is now listed with Santa Fe Realty Partners for $23 million. The new listing includes photographs of the property and a couple of interior shots showing casual Southwestern style.

Read more on Luxist.

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Monday, October 25, 2010

Spring Auction Market Heats Up

Recent results have shown that the Spring selling market got off to a slower than usual start this year however this weekend’s auction results show that buyer activity is steadily returning to the property market.

Since the start of the Spring selling season, Harcourts’ auction results have been solid and the auction system seems to be an efficient way to bring buyers and sellers together, and to achieve results within a good time frame.

Read more at the Harcourts Newsroom

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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Home Buyer & Property Investor Show 29 to 31 October 2010 at Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre, Darling Harbour

Industry leaders tackle the challenges of housing  affordability at this months Home Buyer & Property Investor Show.

 

Sydney remains the most expensive residential property market in Australia and tackling the challenges of affordability will be top of the agenda at the Home Buyer & Property Investor Show this month.

 

Its the only major event in Australia dedicated to educating home buyers and property investors and will be held from Friday 29 – Sunday 31 October at the Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre, Darling Harbour.

 

A Housing Affordability Panel, headed up by the Real Estate Institute of Australia’s (REIA) President, Mr David Airey, will discuss the key factors impacting the NSW property market right now and Mr Airey said, “An understanding of the factors impacting the local property market, coupled with expert advice, can ensure aspiring buyers not only get into the market but that they make smart investment decisions throughout the entire process. The REIA has supported this major event for a number of years now as the focus is on impartial education and it provides a unique forum for would-be home buyers to speak directly to some of the country’s most respected and experienced property experts.

 

The Housing Affordability Panel will cover key issues confronting buyers of all levels now including; how to buy on a limited budget, home loans, saving for a deposit, buying off the plan, preparing for rising interest rates, securing First Home Buyer Grants and tax concessions and other effective strategies to buy property in the current climate.

 

Over 10,000 visitors are expected to attend and many will be eager to lock in the best home loan rates at the show before the anticipated interest rate rises over the coming months.

 

Speakers include renowned home loan guru Mark Bouris; winner of The Apprentice, Andrew Morello who will be presenting a seminar on How to successfully bid at an auction; Money Magazine Editor, Effie Zahos will be discussing How to research, find and secure the perfect home loan and Chris Gray from Empire will provide advice on How to buy and negotiate like a professional investor and “bag a bargain”.

 

Visitors can also hear from contestants from Channel 9’s “The Block” program who will be presenting an interactive seminar on How to add value to your home – renovating tips. 

 

Over 100 exhibitors will also be on display including Aussie Home Loans, AV Jennings, Bankwest, Capital Property, Central Equity, Commonwealth Bank, Defence Housing, Domain.com.au, McGrath Real Estate Agents, Mini-movers, Mission Australia, ING Direct, Office of State Revenue, Parkwood Homes, Planbuild homes, Prime Property Investment, Rams, Real Estate Institute of Australia, Urban Land & Housing, Silverhall and Yellow Brick Road to name a few.

 

Show Director, Glenyse Ford said, “The Australian dream is alive and well but housing shortages and declining affordability in New South Wales is a reality. Our Event aims to cut through all the chatter to provide only the very best advice visitors need from reliable experts. People still make fundamental mistakes when buying property – our event helps demystify the process to ensure people know how to find the right property at the right price and ensure that whatever they buy – it’s a smart investment.  

 Credit: Sold Magazine

Show details

Venue:  Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre, Darling Harbour

Dates/Hours:

Friday 29 October: 12 to 5pm

Saturday 30 and Sunday 31 October: 10am to 5pm

For more information go to www.homebuyershow.com.au

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Monday, October 18, 2010

Property tsar Harry Triguboff rues the rising dollar

 

Credit:News.com.au

AUSTRALIA'S rising dollar has halted the rush of overseas money into Australia's residential property market, with the country's biggest private apartment builder, billionaire Harry Triguboff, saying sales at his Meriton Apartments have fallen 60 per cent since the dollar's surge.

Chinese buyers make up about 80 per cent of the approximately 1500 apartments Meriton builds and sells every year.

"They are worried that if the Australian dollar goes down, they will lose money," Mr Triguboff said.

"They compare our (apartment) prices to their prices. In their minds, our prices have gone up 20 per cent (due to the rising currency)."

On Thursday, the Australian dollar hit a record US99.94 cents, its highest level against the US dollar, and up 20 per cent from US83c in June.

The lack of overseas interest in new apartments would result in a weaker domestic building industry, Mr Triguboff said.

He argues that a property bubble - where prices "burst" - will not occur in the Australian market.

"There is no supply," he says, noting that the lack of new home building would keep a floor under prices.

Countering this was interest rates that were high compared with other countries.

"I think the banks are playing a very dangerous game," he says of indications banks would increase rates independently of the Reserve Bank.

The fall-off in overseas buyers would also dampen housing markets. However, Chinese and offshore buyers would return to Australia, Mr Triguboff said.

"The Chinese are in love with Australia. They will come back. They have been coming back to me for 20 years," he said.

In April, the federal government announced rules clamping down on foreigners buying Australian residential property after offshore buyers were blamed for inflaming rapidly rising housing prices.

They included preventing non-residents buying established Australian homes and requiring temporary residents - such as students - to sell their houses or apartments when leaving the country.

Read more about property tsar rues the rising dollar at The Australian.

Credit:News.com.au Image:IBtimes

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Millionaires in property love affair

Australia’s millionaires are putting their money into real estate, according to new research.

A survey by Merrill Lynch and CapGemini revealed that the nation’s wealthiest people hold 40% of their portfolios in property – higher than any other country in the Asia Pacific region.

Property trumped equities, which made of 25% of total portfolios, and cash, which came in at 19%.

Peter Opie, senior vice president of investments at Merrill Lynch, indicated that the allure of property transcends wealth classes.

According to Opie, property investment will picked up speed in 2009.

"Australian high-net-worth individuals turned the risk switch off in 2009, with investors perceiving real estate to be less volatile than many other forms of investment," said Merrill Lynch Wealth Management's senior vice-president of investments, Peter Opie. "This is a trend that has continued through 2010."

In the next six to 12 months, Opie predicts the level of investment in equities will rise in Australia and around the world.

Credit:Broker News

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Chick in

 

Credit: NY Post

 Texas-born Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Maines has taken the long way home to her new nest in New York City. Maines and her husband, former “Heroes” actor Adrian Pasdar, are buying a four-bedroom home at 525 W. 22nd St. for just more than $4.3 million.

The three-bathroom home, in the Spears Building condo conversion, was listed for $4.449 million and is a light-filled unit with lots of exposed brick and beamed ceilings.

 

Maines and Pasdar, who met at the wedding of Dixie Chick Emily Erwin and got married in Las Vegas in 2000, have two children, 9-year-old Jackson Slade and 6-year-old Beckett Finn.

Maines made headlines in 2003 when she said she was ashamed that President George W. Bush was from Texas. Despite boycotts, the band stuck together and went on to release their “Taking the Long Way” album in 2006, which won five Grammy Awards.

Credit: NY Post  Image Credit: The Stir

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Billion-dollar property price boom

VICTORIAN properties have been collectively valued at a record $1.26 trillion by the Valuer-General.

This is up 16.9 per cent from $1.06 trillion in 2008 and $869.5 billion in 2006.

According to a Herald Sun report, the figures arise from Victoria's biennial revaluation in which the state's 2.6 million residential, industrial, commercial and rural properties are revalued for the purpose of imposing council rates. The Municipal Association of Victoria said this financial year council rates rose by an average 6.1 per cent.

For the fifth consecutive revaluation, Boroondara recorded the highest total property value out of the state's 79 municipalities.

The value of the area's properties was $69.4 billion, up nearly $6 billion since 2008.

The City of Melbourne, including Docklands, recorded the second highest value of private property followed by Stonnington and the Mornington Peninsula.

Lowest totals were recorded in Hindmarsh ($955 million), Buloke and Towong.

The biggest increase in value was recorded in the popular growth area of Wyndham, where the total value of private property increased by 33 per cent from $18.5 billion in 2008 to $24.6 billion thanks to the construction of hundreds of new homes.

Three municipalities - Greater Shepparton, Murrindindi and Wodonga - recorded decreases in value.

Valuer-General Robert Marsh said that since 2008 there had been a 20 per cent increase in the value of residential property.

The values for industrial property had increased 14 per cent, commercial property by 8 per cent and rural property by 7 per cent.

The overall increase in value between the 2006-10 revaluations was 45.3 per cent.

Real Estate Institute of Victoria spokesman Robert Larocca said the figures confirmed that Victorian property prices had risen at a record rate over the past 18 months, pushed higher by confidence in the state's economy and a growing population.

Read more on the Herald Sun.

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Ryan Seacrest On The Move In Los Angeles?

The Real Estalker broke the news that Ryan Seacrest has listed his Hollywood Hills home with an asking price of $14.95 million. Seacrest bought the home in the Nichols Canyon area in 2006 for $11.5 million from Kevin Costner. He made some renovations and the home appeared in Architectural Digest in January 2008 with a smiling Seacrest showing off his trophy home. Gawker has the photo shoot images.

The Mediterranean-style mansion was originally built in 1974 and has six bedrooms according to the listing. Seacrest calls the home Casa di Pace (House of Peace) and hired interior designer Jeff Andrews to do over the home. Andrews has additional images of the home on his website. The home has the sedate and luxurious look of a boutique hotel. So far I haven't been able to track down the official listing but the hunt is on.

Credit: Luxist Image credit: Google

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Canberra and Darwin are Australia's most expensive cities to rent

DARWIN and Canberra remain the most expensive Australian cities to rent a home.

This is occurring as the government and resource sectors, coupled with a shortage of housing stock, continue to push the cost of accommodation higher, The Australian reports.

Rents in Darwin and most other capital cities were steady for the three months to September.

But resource projects in the Northern Territory and tight supply are expected to trigger more increases in the Territory capital, where some residents have been seeking commercial warehouses as an affordable housing alternative, according to real estate agents.

The RP Data rent report showed Darwin's average house rents were $520 a week, followed by Canberra, where rents had risen 3.1 per cent in the past three months to $495 a week.

RP Data analyst Cameron Kusher said while the biggest rises in the coming months would be in Sydney and Melbourne, rents in those cities would still not overtake Canberra or Darwin, which had transient populations.

"People would fly in for the week and go back to their home somewhere else," Mr Kusher said of the two markets.

In the regions, the mining boom also continues to keep rents high, with the cost of renting a house in the Pilbara region in Western Australia still about $1500 a week on average. Mirvac, Stockland, Investa and Aspen are among the property giants circling for opportunities.

Warren Andrews, the director of Claridges and Lin Andrews Real Estate in Darwin, said many people shared housing in Darwin because of the expense.

Darwin mother of four Samantha Watts, and her husband, Dustin, pay $480 a week for a three-bedroom house in the northeastern suburb of Karama. About half of the family's income goes towards rent, which the couple say has continued to increase.

Credit: News.com.au

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Sunday, October 10, 2010

Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones buy in New York for $5.25 million.

Actor Michael Douglas—who recently reprised his role as Gordon Gekko, has just purchased a brick, center-hall Colonial mansion in Bedford for $5.25 million, according to the New York Post. The report says that Douglas and wife, Catherine Zeta-Jones, rented the five-bedroom, 5½-bathroom home for the last six months and then finally took the plunge to buy. I read that the house has a pond, pool, guesthouse and three-car garage on 5.7 acres.

Credit: NY Post Image credit: inquisitr.com

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Aust in new phase of expansion, Ellis

Credit: SMH.com.au

Australian householders and businesses have entered a new phase of expansion, but are more cautious than they were before the global financial crisis, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) says.

RBA head of Financial Stability Luci Ellis also said the local housing market has slowed, after buyers failed to step up following the reduction of government stimulus.

"Our reading of recent data is that the Australian household and business sectors have, in aggregate, entered a phase of expansion. But they seem to be showing more financial caution than they did prior to the crisis," Ms Ellis said in a speech on Wednesday.

"Although wage incomes and profits were quite soft during late 2008 and 2009, the effects of monetary and fiscal policy stimulus largely cushioned this.

"As the effects of policy wane, we are now seeing some hand-off back to employment income and profit growth."

However, Ms Ellis told the audience at the CPA Congress in Brisbane that the hand-off was not being felt across the board, with home buyers shying away from the market.

"Growth in dwelling prices has tapered off in recent months, especially in more expensive suburbs. Housing credit growth has slowed.

"New lending to first-home buyers reverted to closer to its historical share of loan approvals after the additional government grants expired.

"The difference has not so far been made up by other types of buyers."

As a way of mitigating the effects of the global financial crisis, the central bank cut its benchmark interest rate from 7.25 per cent to a 49 year low of three per cent.

It has since taken the rate back to 4.5 per cent, holding it there since May 2010.

The federal government, meanwhile, temporarily enhanced its $7000 first home owners grant to $21,000 for newly constructed homes.

The federal government reduced the enhanced first home owners grant to $14,000 before returning it to $7000 from January 1.

Credit: SMH.com.au

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For sale: city des res with cab sav galore

Credit: Maurice Dunlevy and Meagan Weymes

"YOU wouldn't confuse it with Grange, but it's been good fun."

Brendan Bannan is refering to the backyard vineyard adventure he and wife Jennifer have enjoyed less than 6km from Melbourne's CBD.

The Bannans' private 3032 label, named after their Ascot Vale postcode, supplies family and friends with up to 350 litres a year of shiraz and cabernet sauvignon from vines planted on a backyard plot eight years ago.

Now the vineyard, along with the couple's historic St Leonards Avenue home, is up for sale by auction this month, ripe for an aspiring vigneron who doesn't want to give up the city lifestyle.

It won't come cheap, with bids from $1.8 million.

Both the 365sq m vineyard and renovated 1889 home are the work of the current owners, who bought the then derelict property known as Lauriston for more than $500,000 in 1999.

They established the vineyard two years later, and by 2007, despite grape problems with birds and mildew, were drinking their own wine.

As well as having inner-Melbourne's largest vineyard, the home has a strange and fascinating history, having housed a former local mayor, wives of World War I soldiers, an elderly squatter, an illegal dentist and a group of Ukrainian alcoholics, before being left vacant for years.

"It was such a dump we opened the doors and just left it for a week to try to air it out to get rid of the stench," Ms Bannan said.

It comes with two underground wine cellars, one discovered by Mr Bannan while he was working on the renovations. He found the entrance under an old lino floor, which was further hidden by old newspapers.

"I was reading about Hitler marching into Poland and all those things in 1938, when I found this knob on the floor," he said. "I pulled it up, and there's the cellar."

The Ascot Vale auction is scheduled for October 23, when the traditional spring selling season will be in full swing.

After a decade of renovation work, Mr Bannan said he hoped the new owners would appreciate the property.

"It's fairly romantic for us to think someone will want to have a vineyard, but they might want to put in a tennis court or a swimming pool, or build on it."

Credit: Maurice Dunlevy and Meagan Weymes

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Oscar de la Renta Buys SoHo Apartment

Credit:NY Times

THE fashion designer Oscar de la Renta, who has an apartment on Park Avenue and whose main residence is a sweeping estate in Kent, Conn., bought a $2.4 million condominium in the SoHo Mews for his son Moises de la Renta, also a fashion designer, and for visiting friends and guests, according to East Egg Realty, which closed the deal with Mr. de la Renta on Thursday.

The condominium, at 311 West Broadway, was designed by Gwathmey Siegel and Associates Architects and is made up of two buildings connected by a landscaped interior court yard, called the “secret garden” by the property’s developers. Mr. de la Renta bought a two-bedroom sixth-floor loft in the building that fronts Wooster Street.

Condos went on sale in 2007, but once the recession hit, sales slowed and some buyers unsuccessfully filed lawsuits to get out of their contracts. In other cases, prices were reduced. Mr. de la Renta’s apartment, with 1,400 square feet of space, was first listed at $2.7 million. The unit has 10-foot-high ceilings and views of SoHo’s cast-iron buildings, according to the listing, handled by Leslie C. French of East Egg Realty.

Credit:NY Times, Image: Fashionolic

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Auctions hold up despite grand finals, but Spring selling season off to lacklustre start

Credit:Smart Company

The auctions market managed to hold up well despite the replay of the AFL Grand Final and NRL Grand Final weekend, but experts say sales during the first month of Spring indicate the property market will remain subdued for the rest of the year.

The comments come as the property market braces for a likely interest rate rise tomorrow, although REIA head David Airey says the speculation regarding a rise has hurt the industry more than the rate rise itself.

Figures from the REIV show 473 auctions went ahead on the weekend, with 348 selling resulting in a clearance rate of 74%. On this weekend last year, there were 486 auctions with a clearance rate of 84%.

The performance comes after experts expressed fears that buyers who postponed their sale, only to have it fall on another Grand Final day, would be disappointed with the result.

About 20% of auctions were postponed until next weekend, the REIV said, but spokesman Robert Larocca says sellers had nothing to fear.

"Those fears didn't come to pass and in fact, the clearance rate was slightly better than what we saw throughout September."

Results were fairly solid throughout the country as well, with Sydney recording a 57% clearance rate with 83 properties sold out of 130, with sales totalling $61 million. Brisbane recorded a 60% rate with 18 properties solid, while Adelaide recorded a 48% with 10 properties sold.

But other experts say while this weekend may have exceeded expectations, the overall performance for the month of September suggests the market will remain subdued during Spring. According to APM general manager Anthony Ishaac, Melbourne recorded an overall clearance rate of 69%.

While he says this is a "sound" result, he also notes that listings fell by 7.8% compared to last year, dropping to 2,165. "Combine softer clearance rates with a decline in auction listings and the only outcome is for a fall in the number and value of properties sold at auction," he wrote today.

Larocca argues the tone for this month will set the pace for the rest of the year and that, "we expect clearance rates to be in the high 60s and low 70s until Christmas".

But Real Estate Institute of Australia president David Airey says the average price of each of those properties sold is less than the average from last year, and that prices will continue to drop as the market cools.

"Prices have dropped marginally, and the Victorian properties selling at auction now are moving towards the median price. The higher you go above that, the harder it gets."

Figures show this weekend's median prices came to $635,000 for houses and $502,500 for units. Those figures represent a decline from 11 October last year, when prices were $673,000 for houses and $503,800 for units.

But Airey also says the market is being disrupted by the constant threat of interest rates – and the speculation associated with each RBA meeting. He says movement in either October or November will hurt sales during Spring.

"I have counted several articles in the press during the last few weeks headlining the rate rise. If you want to damage the market and confidence, that's what you need to do. All that talk is taking the confidence away from buyers."

"Of course, we're hearing that it might not happen because housing prices are lowering. But the speculation is taking away confidence and that will have an impact."

Credit:Smart Company

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Brits to sell off Toorak mansions

Credit:Maverick Strategies

The British government's plan to offload some of its Australian properties has set the scene for some major real estate action in Melbourne's richest suburb in the new year.

A PLAN by the cash-strapped British government to offload some of its Australian properties has set the scene for some major real estate action in Melbourne's richest suburb in the new year.

Tough times in Britain have prompted the sale of three Australian properties, including two top-end homes in Toorak and a mansion in Vaucluse, Sydney. British diplomats will be expected to live in more modest city apartments, according to the British Foreign Office.

A spokeswoman for the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office said the residences would be put on the market next year and replaced with properties ''more fit for purpose''.

''We are planning to sell the consul-general residences in Melbourne and Sydney and also the deputy consul-general residence in Melbourne … We're hoping at the same time to realise cost savings with that,'' the spokeswoman said.

The Melbourne consul-general, Stuart Gill, and his family live in an imposing two-storey house with a swimming pool and clay tennis court at 38 Irving Road, Toorak. Mr Gill hosts British government functions and other diplomatic events at the property.

His deputy, Anthony Madeley, lives in another Toorak residence that is also for sale.

The consular home in Irving Road was likely to fetch more than $12 million, buyer advocate David Morrell said.

''Irving Road is one of the best four or five streets in Melbourne,'' he said. ''It doesn't get any better.''

Kay & Burton estate agent Gerald Delany said it was one of the great homes in the precinct.

''There's not a lot on the market. There's not a lot of supply. High quality houses of that nature are not frequently available,'' Mr Delany said.

The home of Sydney consul-general, Richard Morris, is a sandstone mansion in Vaucluse, one of the city's most expensive suburbs.

The British government has owned both residences for more than 30 years. Forced to trim 25 per cent of its budget, it sold 19 properties worldwide last year.

Credit:Maverick Strategies

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