US
By Lauren Beale
C
|
rowned by the sale of a Malibu estate for
$74.5 million, the number of houses sold last year at $1 million and above statewide
jumped to a six-year high, according to real estate information service
DataQuick.
In the strongest showing, the number of homes
sold at $2 million and up, set state, Southern California and L.A. County
records.
"The luxury market did bounce back last
year," said housing market analyst Paul Habibi, a real estate lecturer at
UCLA's Anderson School of Management. "A lot of people were stepping back
into the waters."
Among them were lucrative investors looking
for a place to park their dividends.
"The stock market lined the pockets of
high-end buyers," Habibi said. "That translated into home
purchases."
Appreciation-fueled gains in home equity
allowed others who had been waiting on the sidelines to move up to bigger and
better digs, releasing pent-up demand from recent years.
Statewide, 39,145 homes changed hands for $1
million or more in 2013, up 45% from the year before and the best showing since
2007, DataQuick said. This slice of the market outpaced overall sales, which
were essentially the same as in 2012, down only 0.6%.
An all-time high of 7,383 homes sold in the
state at the $2-million-and-above mark, up 33% from the 5,536 that changed
hands in 2012. Southern California broke a record with 4,514 sales at $2
million and above, and L.A. County also eclipsed previous highs with 2,628
sales.
In L.A.'s ultra-luxury market, locals,
foreigners, flippers and celebrities came to the party, with billionaires
playing musical houses in the $20-million-and-up price range.
Oaktree Capital Management Chairman Howard
Marks had the priciest sale statewide, unloading his 9.5-acre estate in Malibu
in an off-market deal for $74.5 million. The beachfront property includes a
15,000-square-foot main house, two guesthouses, a gym and a swimming pool.
Just down the street, "Karate Kid"
producer Jerry Weintraub had the next highest 2013 sale for L.A. County, based
on public record searches conducted by PropertyShark.com and Coldwell Banker.
His bluff-top seven-acre compound, with two guesthouses, a swimming pool, a
tennis court and a guardhouse, sold for $41 million.
"Our market has finally caught up with
what is happening globally," said Coldwell Banker's Bobby Syed, who
brokered an off-market deal last year of a 12,000-square-foot Beverly Hills
estate priced in the $37-million to $39-million range. "A lot of foreign
money is coming in, particularly to Beverly Hills and Bel-Air, which are still
very cheap by comparison" to other major cities.
The 2.5-acre property he sold boasts a large
flat area and expansive vistas, Syed said. "It was the biggest view from
here to Taiwan," he said.
He represented the buyers and the sellers,
who had bought the property in the 1970s from actress Elizabeth Taylor.
Serial house buyer and talk show host Ellen
DeGeneres was among celebrities who did their part to push high-end home sales,
buying a 13-acre estate centered on a Tuscan-style villa in Santa Barbara
County's Toro Canyon that had been listed at $26.5 million.
She then started this year off with another
big purchase, snagging a modernist trophy home on the Westside for $39.9
million.
Madonna pitched in too, ditching her
1.25-acre compound in Beverly Hills for $19.5 million.
Getting in on the high-end home-flipping act
was retired actor Kristoffer Winters, who renovates homes with actor Jeremy
Renner. Winters and his investors raked in $24 million for a mansion on two
acres in Holmby Hills. The Roaring '20s Art Deco-style house, reached by a
cobblestone driveway, includes five fireplaces, six bedrooms, 11 bathrooms and
10,005 square feet of living space.
Statewide, areas with the highest number of
sales at $1 million-plus were led by Manhattan Beach, Hillsborough and La
Jolla. Brentwood and Beverly Hills came in sixth and seventh, respectively.
In some communities, such as Santa Monica,
Rancho Santa Fe, Atherton and Los Altos, almost all home sales were in the
$1-million-and-up category, partly because of rising prices.
"A lot of homes have just popped up over
the $1-million mark with appreciation," said DataQuick analyst Andrew
LePage.
Source:
LA Times
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