Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Comparing $2 Million Homes


Over the past few weeks we've looked at a few homes in Healdsburg priced around $2 million (here and here).

For that reason this post caught my eye about a 15-bedroom, 17-bathroom, 16,330 sq. foot home near San Diego that failed to get even one bid at $2.275 million.

There are a couple of lessons here: A) Just because you put money into a place doesn't mean you will get it back (this place cost $10 million to build) and B) Price declines around California are going to catch up with Healdsburg. Sure, Healdsburg is nice. But if someone were really looking to spend $2 million on a home an extra 14,000 square feet might get them to sacrifice location.

Here are the details (via Patrick.net):

It’s a bad sign when a new home that cost more than $10 million to build fails to attract even a single bidder at a foreclosure auction.

Yet that’s what happened Feb. 13 when Chevy Chase Bank put a 15-bedroom, 17-bathroom Encinitas property on the block with an opening bid of $2.275 million. The 16,330 square-foot home, which has a library, yoga room, swimming pool, fountains, lush landscaping and much more, is described by local foreclosure experts as the county’s current largest home foreclosure.

3 comments:

  1. Why would this place not even get one bid? The description makes it sound like it is worth more than $2 million dollars.

    There might be something wrong with it where the new owner would have to spend even more money.

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  2. And consider what $2M will currently bring in metro areas (with jobs) such as Seattle, Portland, Denver, or Phoenix? Of course, today this price point is unattainable by even many highly-paid professionals, and yet I've mediocre homes in Sonoma above the $1M mark.

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  3. Jim The Realtor's videos have been a joy.As far as local prices,errm.The pool of people who can afford a $2mm house has shrunk a bit.The requirement for 30% down and a clearly declining market means people actually have to think about their decision for a moment,and the usual response is "let's just lease it for $10 k a month and see how we like it"

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