November 10, 2024

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Q1 2022 In NYC Real Estate: New York Market Remains A Juggernaut

3 min read

Inventory is up. Mortgage rates are up (and climbing.) Do these indicators presage a slowdown in the white-hot New York City real estate market? Will the uncertainty around the ongoing Ukraine war freeze homebuyers in their tracks? How have buyers and sellers fared during the first quarter of 2022?

Sales have remained brisk throughout the first quarter, although transactions in the luxury condominium market slowed since the end of last year. The Olshan Luxury Market Report, which tracks contracts signed from week to week for $4 million and more, has shown fewer sales in excess of $15 million during February and March. And each week, amongst the ten highest priced contracts, co-ops represent one or at most two of the deals. The ultra-luxury buyer, spending $10 million or more, wants a condo, preferably newly built and hassle free. Most of the co-ops listed for prices above $10 million sell slowly, frequently taking a year or more and several price cuts before they find a buyer.

The market has remained particularly robust in its appetite for a) smaller apartments, b) those larger units with high square footage at reasonable prices, and c) almost anything in the most popular and supply-constrained areas like Greenwich Village and Park Slope. A few examples: a postwar 4-bedroom co-op in the East 70s came on recently priced just under $3 million; it received a full price offer within 24 hours. A gracious 5 room in a prestigious postwar building in the West Village, off Fifth Avenue, also sold in a day for just under $4 million. And a tiny two-bedroom fourth floor walk-up in Boerum Hill, under 1000 square feet and well under $1 million, had so many open house visitors that the broker had to end the showing early. He received 11 offers!

After seeing declining inventory every month since last summer, March has finally witnessed a net gain in available inventory. Thus, for the first time in a year, listings new to the market have exceeded those either put into contract or removed from the “Active” category. This is a significant shift as the market moves into spring. Listings usually tick up in April, September, and January, but during the past year, the market has seen disappointingly small gains in available property, leading to the current demand/supply imbalance. Perhaps, as the second quarter begins, the market will see adequate supply coming to market, enabling buyers to find the homes they look to purchase before interest rates rise again. The Federal Reserve has indicated that, in its push to curb inflation, it will likely raise rates at every one of its subsequent meetings during 2022.

Most indicators suggest that, while sales and rental numbers have cooled from the unprecedented first quarter numbers of 2021, the real estate markets throughout the city remain robust. The rental market, which had not fully regained its footing as of this time last year, came roaring back during the second half of the year; tenants rather than landlords are once again expected to pay full 15% commissions on lease signing, and properties everywhere receive competing offers within a week or two of listing. While the higher end rental market certainly requires more time and effort, rentals for $10,000, $20,000, even $30,000 per month are once again scarce and sought after, especially in the prime Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens neighborhoods.

(A side note on interest rates: during the early to mid-1980s, mortgage rates fluctuated between 14% and 16%, sinking to hover around 10% for the balance of that decade. It wasn’t until 1993 that rates finally fell below 6%. But since the recession of 2008, an entire generation has come of age without experiencing mortgage interest rates as high as 4%. Thus, this uniquely anomalous period of the last 15 years leads today’s buyers of real estate to fear interest rates of 4% or 4.5% which would have been considered highly favorable at almost any other time in the post-World War II era.)

The second quarter seems likely to be as busy as the first. With an increase in inventory likely as April ushers in the spring market, and buyers who, in spite of the uncertainties inherent in the present moment, want to take advantage of today’s interest rates to satisfy their post-pandemic needs and desires, the stage is set for a busy few months. It may be less overheated than at this time last year, but the New York market remains a juggernaut.