miller samuel
Et Tu, Queens? Home Sales There Plunge, Just Like Manhattan, Brooklyn
Home sales in Queens plunged annually from the spring of 2007, according to a new report, joining Brooklyn and Manhattan in steep year-over-year sales slides.
Queens home sales were down 23.7 percent from the second quarter of 2007 through the second quarter of 2008, to 2,363, according to the report out this week from appraisal firm Miller Samuel and brokerage Prudential Douglas Elliman. The second quarter sales amount--nearly 3,100--represents, apparently, a quarterly peak since 2004. read more »
A report earlier this month showed Brooklyn home sales plunging 43.6 percent annually. And, in Manhattan, sales dropped 21.8 percent year over year. The reports tracked deals closed in the quarter ending June 30 (the Manhattan and Brooklyn ones are available
Brooklyn's Busiest Half
Most of Brooklyn's home sales are happening in South Brooklyn, a slice of the city much less traveled by Manhattanites than the increasingly mirror-image neighborhoods further north.
In the first half of 2008, over 53 percent of Brooklyn home sales closed in South Brooklyn, according to a report (PDF) from appraisal firm Miller Samuel and brokerage Douglas Elliman.
Maybe it's got something to do with the fact that South Brooklyn, unlike its condo-laden neighbors elsewhere, remains awash in houses. "One- to three-family houses account for half the sales in the entire borough," Jonathan Miller, the report's author, pointed out yesterday.
Fresh Round of Recrimination? Manhattan Market Reports Due
The second-quarter Manhattan housing market reports will be out by Wednesday morning of next week. Last time they hit, for the first quarter, the reports caused quite the kerfuffle, including internal company e-mails and a New York Times article trying to sort the whole thing out.
Basically, it went like this: Prudential Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel's report showed a 34 percent annual drop in Manhattan home sales. Brown Harris Stevens and Halstead Property's showed a 5 percent gain. And the Corcoran Group's showed a mere 1 percent drop.
All good and well--different measures by different firms, different numbers. read more »
Long Island City Condos Boost Housing Prices in Queens
Sorry, outer-borough bargain-hunters; the median sales price in Queens actually increased slightly to $498,500 in the first quarter of 2008, compared to $492,900 in the same period last year, according to Prudential Douglas Elliman’s Q1 2008 Long Island/Queens Market Report.
Credit all the new high-end developments coming on-line, not increasing demand, for the price hike. read more »
Condos Ascendant! But What Price Victory?
Condo sales accounted for 56 percent of the housing deals closed in Manhattan in the first quarter of 2008. That's a striking percentage given recent history and the borough's housing stock.
Co-ops usually outnumber condo sales, though the two types of housing have gained a bit of sales parity in recent years. In the fourth quarter of 2007, for instance, condos accounted for 49 percent of the apartment deals and co-ops 51 percent, according to appraisal firm Miller Samuel. In the quarter before that, condos accounted for 48 percent. In 2006, condos accounted for over 49 percent of all deals.
Such percentages come despite condos representing maybe 25 percent of the for-sale housing stock in Manhattan. The rest are co-ops (or townhouses).
Yet, now, condos have pulled well ahead of co-ops. Why? Any number of reasons but two probably matter more than most: new-condo development and co-op boards. read more »
Stat of The Day: 3,474
That was the number of condo and co-op sales in Manhattan in the first quarter of 2007, according to appraisal firm Miller Samuel. Only two other quarters since at least the late 1980's--the second and third quarters of 2007--have topped that sales amount. Will the first quarter of 2008 top it? Stay tuned.
Manhattan Housing Market as Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon
Next Tuesday is April 1, and the first-quarter housing market reports for Manhattan will start trickling out from brokerages like Halstead, Corcoran and Douglas Elliman. What will they say about home sales?
No one knows for certain, of course, but the speculation should pick up noticably in the next few days so here goes:
The first quarter of any year is usually relatively paltry in terms of the number of closed deals because those deals were cut in the winter months, which are normally among the slowest in Manhattan housing. read more »
Miller Samuel, Radar Logic Break Off Engagement
Appraiser Jonathan Miller emailed late on Friday to say that his firm Miller Samuel would not be merging with data and analytics firm Radar Logic after all. The two firms announced last fall that Radar Logic would acquire Miller Samuel, but the deal never closed. Mr. Miller's firm will remain by its original name and will continue to produce those quarterly reports that are to the Manhattan housing market what those brackets are to the NCAA Tournament.














