Daily Archives: July 8, 2014

How Soon Will China’s Real Estate Market Bounce Back? | Waccabuc Real Estate

Is a housing crash imminent in China? China bears would think so. Home prices in major Chinese cities like Beijing and Shanghai are slipping, and transactions are taking a nosedive. The real estate market has entered what is arguably the deepest correction since the 2008 financial crisis, causing fears of a hard landing that might also drag down the entire Chinese economy.

So how much trouble is the real estate market actually in? According to the China Index Academy, an independent property research organization owned by real estate portal SouFun, housing prices in the 100 cities it monitors dropped 0.5% in June from the previous month, greater than the 0.32% month-on-month decline recorded in May (the first price downturn in 23 months).

English: The skyline of Shanghai, China.

The skyline of Shanghai, China. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

But falling prices is not the most alarming signal, at least not yet (compared with the same period last year, prices were still higher in most major cities). It’s the distinct drop in transaction volume that is making economists nervous. As per SouFun’s data, transactions across major cities fell 19% year-on-year in the first six months of 2014, while new home transactions in Beijing and Shanghai fell drastically by 48.6% and 32.8% respectively, according to other research firms.

“That’s an indication that the demand is small, and so eventually prices will move too,” says Liu Jing, professor of accounting and finance at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, who closely follows China’s real estate market. “You can already see prices come down in several cities.”

 

 

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http://www.forbes.com/sites/ckgsb/2014/07/08/how-soon-will-chinas-real-estate-market-bounce-back/

Count the Bison in NYC’s Most Taxidermy-Filled Apartment | Katonah Real Estate

 

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For some, the wonders of nature are too majestic not to have stuffed, mounted, and hung above the chaise longue. For an especially committed subset of that worldwide fraternity of taxidermy lovers, there’s no need to put away one’s collection of fauna when shooting listing photos. After all, who’s to say that a roaring catamount can’t bring together a living room? Recently profiled in the New York Times is the Upper West Side apartment of author, journalist, and socialite Gregory Speck, which gives the most taxidermy-filled home in Brooklyn a run for its money. Apparently there are over 200 dearly departed furry friends decorating the place— acquired from “museum liquidations, taxidermist castoffs and hunters whose wives wouldn’t allow them to hang their trophies in the house”—so many that, rather than go through the hassle of taking them down to document the place for its $3.395M entrance onto the market, Speck had the Halstead Property marketing team digitally remove them. Behold the rest of this menagerie below, and head to Curbed NY for the retouched, fauna-scrubbed glamour shots:

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/07/07/gregory-specks-taxidermy-filled-apartment.php

Own a Modernist Home in an Architects’ Utopia for $1.4M | Bedford Hills Real Estate

 

 

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This circa-1948 International Style three-bedroom was designed and inhabited by Norman and Jean Fletcher, two founding members of The Architects Collaborative, or TAC, which was started in 1945 when Bauhaus mainstay Walter Gropius teamed up with a group of young architects. The very rectangular 3,400-square-foot abode is part of the planned community of Six Moon Hill in Lexington, Mass., an early TAC pursuit that saw most of the founding partners (Gropius excluded) building houses and starting families on 20 bucolic acres they bought together. The Fletcher residence, which was last sold in 2013 for $1.34M, has the same flat roof, vertical wood siding, and walls of glass shared by the original Six Moon Hill homes, and also shares their communal commitment to keeping bedrooms small and shared spaces expansive. Back in 2004, one resident told the Boston Globe that “things have changed since the ’50s and ’60s, when everyone was running in and out of everyone’s houses.” But at least a decade ago, the socialist spirit of the place lived on in “great community traditions, like snowstorm parties.” The ask, for admittance into this Bauhaus-inspired American experiment? $1.398M.

 

 

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/07/07/own-a-modernist-home-in-an-architects-utopia-for-14m.php

The Kitschiest French Manor in New Jersey Wants $6.4M | Bedford Real Estate

 

 

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Location: Mendham Boro, N.J.
Price: $6,400,000
The Skinny: “Old world craftsmanship”, “attention to detail”, “Work of Art”, and “discerning buyer”: phrases like these strung together in the context of a real estate listing should be a warning to the unwary and unschooled homebuyer who, flush with a pre-approved mortgage and eager to buy, is all too apt to be gulled into believing that hideous design somehow equates to high-class residential property. One look inside this gaudy “French Manor” out in the wilds of New Jersey should disabuse any prospective purchasers of that notion, but the sad truth is that riotously patterned wall treatments, garish, hand-painted coffered ceilings, and awful furniture at least have the benefit of being infinitely more interesting than the plain white walls and boring, half-empty great rooms of most modern McMansions. And, come to think of it, aren’t many of the grand homes we celebrate today (i.e. the Biltmore Estate, the Breakers, El Furiedis) just palaces of kitsch that have benefited from the burnishing, patina-inducing effects of passing time? Maybe one day this home, with its absolutely over-the-top chapel (with its weird stained-glass depiction of a saint solemnly tickling the ivories) and its creepily haunting painting of a barkeep (“Your money is no good here, Mr. Torrance”) will be celebrated as a sui generis masterpiece, made the subject of coffee table books and PBS documentaries, and be entered into the pantheon of Great American Homes. Until then it can be had for $6.4M.

 

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http://curbed.com/archives/2014/07/07/the-kitschiest-french-manor-in-all-of-new-jersey-wants-64m.php