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Manhattan Residential Sales Up 4 Percent: 2nd Quarter 2011 Market Report

By
Real Estate Agent with Halstead Property, LLC

After a slight drop in prices at the beginning of the year, the Manhattan real estate market has stabilized in the past three months, with prices rising slightly and sales volume increasing with an expected spring surge in home buying.

Market reports that the city's largest brokerage firms released today showed that the increase in the average sale price was largely attributed to more robust sales of larger and more expensive apartments, while studio and one-bedroom sales lagged slightly.

The 2nd Quarter 2011 market reports were release today by all of the major residential firms in Manhattan showing the average Manhattan apartment sale price of $1,430,432 was up 5 percent from last quarter and up 4 percent from the same period in 2010.

According to the report, sales over $5 million, particularly coop sales over $10 million were responsible for driving the average price higher. The median price, which measures the middle of the market and is not as impacted by high-end sales, fell 1 percent over the past year to $835,000. At 2,115, the number of reported sales was down 7 percent from a year ago.

The average price for coops sold during the second quarter of 2011 was up 14 percent from a year ago, to $1,214,047; this was due to increased sales in 3-bedroom and larger apartments. On the East Side, average price for all sizes apartments except two-bedrooms rose, led by three-bedroom and larger apartments which were up 15 percent over last year. Prices for all sizes of apartments, except those 3-bedrooms and larger, were down slightly on the West Side. In both the Midtown East & West markets condo prices were steady and co-op prices rose for prewar and dropped for postwar. Downtown prices rose for all size categories except one-bedrooms. The average condominium price was $1,670,908, down just 1 percent from a year ago.

Data from sister firms Halstead Property and Brown Harris Stevens show mixed but healthy indicators. In a still strict lending environment, it comes as little surprise that the best performing sectors of the market -- the top end of the market where buyers are wealthiest, and the bottom end of the new development market where units qualify for Federal Housing Authority-approved loans -- were those where financing came easiest.

According to a Bloomberg news report lenders are easing credit requirements on jumbo loan limits and narrowing the gap on rates compared with government-backed loans.

Manhattan's residential market is definitely looking up.

See Halstead Property's 2nd Quarter 2011 Market Report