Originally published Saturday, February 7, 2009 at 12:00 AM
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High-end homes finally feeling the pinch in L.A.
Home prices that continued to soar well into 2008 finally tanked at the end of the year, which was a drop some area residents never thought they'd see.
Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — The Southern California real-estate crash has finally reached the high-end areas of Los Angeles' west side.
Home prices in Beverly Hills, Santa Monica and Malibu — which continued to soar well into 2008 — finally tanked at the end of the year, losing between 26 and 30 percent of their value in just a few months, the latest data show.
The sudden drop came as a surprise to Shelley Conn, who remained a believer in the myth that the wealthier parts of the area were immune until she put her Santa Monica house on the market last spring.
She and her husband, Bill, had been offered $2.4 million for the three-bedroom home just months before, so she listed the house for $2.3 million, figuring that would make up for the lousy real-estate climate. But it didn't sell until November, after the couple dropped the price to $1.9 million.
It's still plenty of money for a basic one-story house. But in Conn's wealthy neighborhood, few residents thought anything would drop below $2 million.
"I didn't believe it until the end," Conn said.
The median price of a single-family home in Beverly Hills was $2.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2008, down from $3 million in the second quarter, according to data prepared for the Los Angeles Times by research firm MDA DataQuick.
The Pacific Palisades neighborhood closed the year with a median price of $2.2 million, down from a high of $2.6 million during the second quarter, and Santa Monica's median was $1.6 million, down from $2.1 million last winter.
The Brentwood neighborhood's fourth-quarter median of $2.3 million was down 11 percent from its peak.
"The market is absolutely correcting," said Richard Stearns, who lives in Santa Monica and sells real estate in Brentwood. "Prices are softening, houses are taking longer to sell, the number of transactions is down."
The downward trend is no surprise to economist Christopher Thornberg, principal of the Los Angeles consulting firm Beacon Economics, who for years angered many real-estate agents by repeatedly saying the Westside would eventually see price declines just like the rest of Southern California.
"It was never a function of if," Thornberg said. "It was always when."
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When people in entry-level homes can't sell their properties to move up, there is less demand in the middle and eventually at the high end, he said.
"It takes a while, but the markets are all linked," Thornberg said.
The numbers were bound to go down, he and others said, for the same reasons they did in less wealthy neighborhoods — prices rose beyond what incomes could reasonably support.
Wealthy areas can stave off market woes for a while, in part because well-off homeowners usually have the resources to sustain high mortgage payments and weather downturns longer than people with less money. In many cases, the affluent can afford to hold on to a house longer while waiting for a better price.
But eventually the market catches up, and those who want to sell their expensive houses have to cut prices.
It's happened before. Though few seemed to remember it even last year, the Westside has suffered in previous real estate downturns.
At the peak of the 1980s housing boom, for example, the Santa Monica house that the Conns recently sold went for $920,000. But in 1993, it sold for $600,000 — a 35 percent drop. The Conns bought it for $825,000 in 1997, still 10 percent below its 1989 price.
They didn't time the market so well the second time around, though. They bought their current house in the same neighborhood before prices started to drop, paying $3.9 million.
Lately, sellers have been pulling unsold houses off the market to rent instead, said Elizabeth Puro, a Westside real-estate agent, but waiting the market out as a landlord is becoming less attractive as rents go down. That could eventually pull selling prices lower still. She estimates there are three times as many houses for lease on the Westside as there were a year ago, and "that market is not as strong as it was. Someone who could have leased a house for $20,000 a month a year ago would have to lease it for $12,000 now," she said.
The lower rents could in turn push housing prices down even more, said University of California, Berkeley, economist Tom Davidoff.
Conn, for one, says she is prepared for that.
"We bought our previous house because we thought it would be a good investment," she said. "This time, we bought a house we fell in love with."
Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company
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