Desperate office owners are using this conversion trick to make deals

What is the owner of a Manhattan office tower to do in the age of work-from-home? Hotel or residential conversions are complex and costly. Building renovations that add amenities in hopes of luring top tenants are expensive and may not even work. But for those left holding the bag, there is another way out: the office condominium. 

Creating office condos within a property allows the building to be sold one floor at a time. They can add value — but they also take time.

Each individual floor of an office condo sells for more on a per-square-foot basis than if the building was sold as one unit, said Michael Rudder of Rudder Property Group, and over 90% of such floors are purchased by owner-occupiers.

Rudder, whose company specializes in helping building owners navigate the process, said the current sales market ranges from $500 to $850 per foot.

“The ones that are $500 per foot are in buildings that would sell for $200 a foot,” he said. “While office condo pricing is way down — by 30% to 50% — it’s still much higher than what office buildings are selling for.”

Renovated, turn-key office condos at 125 Maiden Lane come with a roof deck. Rudder Property Group

Six recent full-building sales achieved average pricing of $396 per square foot, while the average price per square foot for six recent office condominium sales was $726 per square foot — a remarkable 83% premium over office building sales. As an example of this lower pricing, Rudder pointed to the sale of the entire small office building at 6 E. 45th St., just a few steps from Fifth Avenue. It has 79,290 square feet and sold for $338 per foot earlier this year and included an occupied ground-floor retail space. 

For office condo investors, one of the benefits is that they are managed by a third party.

“I pay my common charges and taxes and my tenants pay me,” said Rudder, who owns several. “I go there once a year.”

If the original cost basis plus the professional fees to convert are less than $300 per foot, it may make sense to convert if there is no other exit strategy, agreed Adelaide Polsinelli of Compass. But she warned: “There are few office condo buyers in the market today unless the price is extremely attractive.” Instead, Polsinelli believes selling the whole building at once is faster and less expensive. “It is best to cash out and redeploy that capital into a new deal,” she added. 

“You sell off a block and you pay down debt and you live to see another day.”

Michael Rudder of Rudder Property Group

To pursue an office condominium, it takes roughly six to 12 months working with accountants, architects and attorneys to create the proper documents and have the plan approved by the New York State attorney general’s office. The legal and architectural expenses run around $200,000, Rudder said.

Nevertheless, the current stress on the real estate market will lead to more conversions of office condos, he predicts. 

The buyers of office floors often include small businesses, especially those run by non-US-born operators. Not-for-profits and foreign countries are also regular buyers of their offices and waive diplomatic immunity when making the purchase.

“They buy properties for all cash and have been a wonderful part of the office market and New York economy,” Rudder said of the countries. 

One offering being marketed by Rudder for $9.10 million is a full-floor office condominium with 18,201 square feet at 125 Maiden Lane in Lower Manhattan. The building has a roof-deck and  a full gym with showers for tenants.

Three floors of office condos are for sale at 185 Broadway for $14.3 million. Handout

Rudder has numerous other offerings, including 28,703 square feet across three floors in the base of the new tower at 185 Broadway that can be sold separately for $495 per foot, per floor, or all for about $14.3 million. It also comes with a 35-year tax abatement. 

Another of Rudder’s offerings is a small medical office of 2,587 square feet at 110 E. 40th St. for $1.4 million.

Office condo owners are responsible for both common charges and property taxes. But non-profits and foreign countries may apply to the city’s Department of Finance for permission to waive their real estate taxes and certain other charges.

A 2,587-square-foot slice of 110 E. 40th St. is asking $1.4 million. Handout

Owner-occupying buyers can also obtain loans from the Small Business Administration (SBA) — a lending source not available to those buying office buildings they won’t occupy — and such loans have a default rate of less than 3%, Rudder said.

While the maximum loan size between the SBA and a traditional lender cannot exceed $14 million, borrowers can take out multiple loans at the same time for different projects, raising their maximum amount to $20 million. The current building owners don’t have to sell all the floors, either.

“You sell off a block and you pay down debt and you live to see another day,” said Rudder.

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Related Companies snags new leases at 55 and 50 Hudson Yards

Related Companies has scored 80,000 square feet of new leases at Hudson Yards, according to sources.

At 55 Hudson Yards, J.F. Lehman & Company signed for 29,000 square feet, replacing Vista which expanded into a larger space at neighboring 50 Hudson Yards.

Separately, Milbank LLP added 28,000 square feet to bring its total in the fully-leased 1.3 million square-footer to 315,000 square feet.


Related Companies has added 80,000 square feet of new leases at Hudson Yards.
ZUMAPRESS.com

Meanwhile, Liberty Mutual took 20,000 sf at 50 Hudson Yards, where major tenants include Point72 Asset Management. Related declined to comment.

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Priciest rental in Las Vegas is a $100K/month mega-mansion

What happens in this home, stays in this home.

A mega-mansion in the middle of the Las Vegas desert is now the priciest in Sin City, The Post has learned.

A fully gated compound, the seven-bedroom, 11-bathroom abode is set on 2.2 acres and boasts unobstructed strip views from every room, the listing notes.

Occupying over 13,400 square feet, the home comes with every amenity imaginable.

The property features a gym, a tennis and sports court that’s fully lit for night games, an indoor basketball court, a movie theater and a bowling alley.

It also comes with a two-story guest house, an edgeless 50-foot-long pool and spa, and multiple wet bars with wine and soda on tap.

The property sits over 100 feet above a private golf course.


The property spans 13,400 square feet.
The Agency

A foyer.
The Agency

The living area.
The Agency

A two-lane bowling alley.
The Agency

The wet bar.
The Agency

Features include an expansive kitchen complete with double islands, an automatic 40-foot window, and a private deck with a BBQ and pizza oven.

Other amenities include double game lofts and a massive rooftop party deck.

There is also an 18-car garage.

“This 15,000-square-foot masterpiece had no budget,” the listing notes. “It was constructed with the best of the best top to bottom.”

Zar Zanganeh of The Agency Las Vegas holds the listing.

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I’m a pro clean freak — why you should scrub your house every day

We’re getting freaky – about cleaning.

Don’t let your home become a “bacterial war zone,” cleaning enthusiast Angela Donal warns.

The 41-year-old swears by a few simple hacks that keep her home in tip-top shape and ward off bacteria.

Her best home-kept secret is to clean her house “every single day” and conduct a thorough deep clean once a week.

“Every day we should clean,” the Peachy Clean founder told South West News Service. “Cleaning is an essential part of your life.”

“Every house needs one good clean a week due to bacteria spreading.”

If there just aren’t enough hours in a day, hire a professional cleaner, she advised.

Her guidance comes after a recent survey revealed that most people don’t clean their house for a month.


The cleanliness enthusiast recommended cleaning taps and faucets every week.
Angela Donal / SWNS

Germs can accumulate on commonly touched and used surfaces and items.
Angela Donal / SWNS

Donal got down and dirty with the cleanliness facts, revealing that the dirtiest item in your home is constantly next to your face.

“The most-touched thing in your home is probably your mobile phone. It’s 10 times dirtier than some toilet seats,” she explained. “Make sure you clean it regularly with alcohol-based sanitizer.”

Dishcloths are “notorious for bacteria,” said Donal, who hails from Belfast, Northern Ireland, noting that every time she uses a cloth, she disinfects it.

Of course, everyone knows the importance of hand washing, but the clean freak puts extra emphasis on a healthy routine.


Shower drains collect dead skin and hair, so they should be cleaned regularly, she said.
Angela Donal / SWNS

Her simple hack for cleaning sinks is boiling water and bleach.
Angela Donal / SWNS

“Don’t open doors without washing your hands or doing anything that may involve touching something,” she advised, adding that light switches should also be cleaned regularly.

“Keep your hands away from your face to prevent viruses that you may pick up from your hands — they are very easily spread,” she advised.

Donal recommends deep-cleaning shower drain plugs, countertops and toilets frequently, as well as disinfecting taps, handles, remote controls and sink drains weekly.

Toothbrush holders should also be washed every week, while kitchen sponges, she claimed, are one of the dirtiest items in the home.

Now that she’s tackled everything but the kitchen sink, it’s up next on her to-do list.

“Instead of standing and cleaning the sink for half an hour, put some bleach in the sink, pop the plug in with a kettle of boiling water,” she said, promising a germ-free sink afterward.

But Donal isn’t the first hygiene enthusiast to offer up some cleaning advice to the messy masses.


Donal, a professional cleaner, warned people that their cell phones are one of the dirtiest items they own.
Angela Donal / SWNS

Alyssa Armstrong, the founder of Alyssa’s Cleaning Company, previously took to TikTok to recommend the four common household cleaners to toss immediately.

Up on the chopping block: Windex, Bona Hardwood Floor Polish, Mr. Clean Magic Erasers and any sponge that isn’t a Scrub Daddy.

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NYC home adjacent to Sarah Jessica Parker’s sells for $26.75M

A historic West Village townhouse adjacent to Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick’s megamansion on West 11th Street has sold for $26.75 million, according to property records.

The seller is Alicia CastroLeal Harper, the daughter of Mexico’s former ambassador to France and the ex-wife of the late TV producer Alan Harper. The buyer is a trust connected to billionaire Brad Jacobs, chairman of XPO Logistics.

The red brick, Greek Revival-style townhouse at 271 W. 11th St. is nearly 26 feet wide.

It was once on the market for $34.5 million in 2018 and boasts one of the largest gardens in the Village, according to a former listing from Dolly Lenz Real Estate.


Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick.
Penske Media via Getty Images

A rendering of the home — it’s multi-family and ready to return to single-family use.
Dolly Lenz Real Estate

Built in 1884, the 8,000-square-foot home features seven bedrooms, seven baths, high ceilings and lots of windows. Transformed into a multi-unit building, it is ready to return to single-family mansion status.

Other owners on the street include Softbank CEO Marcelo Claure of 269 W. 11th St. Vicki Been, a former deputy mayor for housing and economic development and a former commissioner of NYC’s department of Housing Preservation & Development — now an NYU law professor — and her husband, NYU’s Richard Revesz, sold their home at 230 W. 11th St. for $18.8 million last year. They bought it from NYU’s School of Law Foundation for $1.88 million in 2002.

Liv Tyler also sold her corner block home at 255 W. 11th St. to Eater founder and Resy co-founder Ben Leventhal. Burrito baron Steve Ells, the founder of Chipotle, also bought a $30 million crash pad at 27 E. 11th St., Gimme Shelter revealed, while he awaited the completion of his megamansion at the corner of West 11th and West 4th streets.

“This is one of the most desirable streets in the Village,” said broker Jenny Lenz, of Dolly Lenz Real Estate, who sold four homes on the block. “It’s a beautiful, peaceful block, with historic mansions reminiscent of London, and the A-list celebrities only add to the allure.” 

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PR firm Joele Frank scoops up space at 22 Vanderbilt, aka 335 Madison

The rarest sighting in this bleak office-leasing season is a deal for more space than a large area rug would cover.

But here’s a substantial one: public relations firm Joele Frank is taking 78,353 square feet at Milstein’s 22 Vanderbilt, aka 335 Madison Ave.

Joele Frank, which specializes in strategic corporate representation, will leave 50,000 square feet at Charles S. Cohen’s 622 Third Ave. by year’s end.

The new lease is for 16 years with an asking rent of $95 a square foot.

The rose-colored marble tower at Madison and East 43rd Street is wrapping up a years-long, under-the-radar repositioning spearheaded by Michael Milstein, son of Milstein Properties founder Howard Milstein.

The quarter-billion-dollar project includes a new, public-friendly lobby with eatery options — not a “food court” — under the overall name of Melangerie, overseen by accomplished New York chef Graceanne Jordan; a richly appointed bar/lounge called Bergamo’s; and nearly 80,000 square feet of tenants’ amenities including conference and wellness centers.

I had wonderful, hearty matzo ball soup (called “Schmaltz”) and tangy soba noodle salad at Chef’s Counter, the first of several eateries to open in the lobby. More are due later this year.


The quarter-billion-dollar project features nearly 80,000 square feet of tenants’ amenities including conference and wellness centers.
photo credit: CBRE

“There are obviously not a lot of large deals now,” said Paul Amrich, leader of the CBRE team that represented Milstein.

After a year-long search for a new home, he said, “The entire Joele Frank partnership fell in love with 22 Vanderbilt.”

The 27-story, 1.19 million square-foot tower is 68% leased. It has two large availabilities right now — 300,000 square feet in the tower and 120,000 square feet in the base.

The Milsteins demolished the former Biltmore Hotel at the site in the 1980s and built a new headquarters for Bank of America, which later moved to One Bryant Park.

The famous Biltmore lobby clock, which also stood for some years in the BofA lobby before disappearing into storage, is to be restored and installed in Bergamo’s.

When the bank left, the Milsteins leased the property out on a floor-by-floor basis, including to Giorgio Armani’s North American headquarters.

Now they’re touting the building, which stands across the street from SL Green’s One Vanderbilt, as an integral part of the fast-revitalizing Grand Central Terminal area.

This week marks a coming-out party of sorts for 22 Vanderbilt. It will host a press briefing called “Grand Central Reimagined” at 12:30 p.m. on March 22, where speakers are to include MTA chairman Janno Lieber and Grand Central Partnership president Fred Cerullo.

CBRE’s Amrich, Neil King, Sacha Zarba, Jeff Fischer, and Meghan Allen represented Milstein. Newmark’s  Andrew Sachs and Ben Shapiro repped Joele Frank.

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Here’s how Venus Williams plans to save Nina Simone’s home

Tennis superstar Venus Williams has teamed up with conceptual artist Adam Pendleton to preserve the house where the late singer Nina Simone grew up.

In collaboration with the National Trust’s African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, Williams is raising money to renovate the North Carolina property.

The fundraising endeavor will be two-fold, and include both an auction of “exceptional works donated by internationally renowned contemporary artists” conducted by Sotheby’s, beginning online May 11 and closing May 22 — as well as a ticketed gala at Manhattan’s Pace Gallery on May 20. 

“Through this project, the Action Fund aims to restore the birthplace of musical icon and civil rights activist Nina Simone in Tryon, North Carolina,” reads a press release on the National Trust for Historic Preservation website, adding that Simone’s cultural legacy is “of great personal significance to all the artists donating work.” 

Simone, who was born Eunice Waymon in 1933, spent her childhood in the three-room clapboard house — attending church with her mother, a Methodist preacher. 


The childhood home of Nina Simone in North Carolina.
Nancy Pierce / National Trust for Historic Preservation

Those involved are torn regarding how to preserve the property.
Nancy Pierce / National Trust for Historic Preservation

The current co-owners paid $95,000 for the house in 2017.
Nancy Pierce / National Trust for Historic Preservation

Another interior of the home.
Nancy Pierce / National Trust for Historic Preservation

A portrait of Simone.
The Nina Simone Project

Simone performs on a television show at BBC Television Centre in London in 1966.
Redferns

It was during this time that community members recognized Simone’s nascent talent and the then 6-year-old prodigy began taking private piano lessons. 

Eventually, in 1950, she moved to New York City to attend Julliard — then began performing in Atlantic City, changed her name, and gradually became the High Priestess of Soul and a Civil Rights activist, according to her estate.

She passed away in 2003, at the age of 70.

Until 2017, “little was known” about the humble house she came of age in when Pendleton and a group of other artists — Ellen Gallagher, Rashid Johnson, and Julie Mehretu — decided to jointly purchase it, to safeguard its legacy. 

Now, a variety of groups and individuals are working together to decide how best to preserve the space. 

Currently, those involved are undecided if the house should be maintained as it is or renovated to include a modern amenity-equipped expansion that could be used as an artist residency.

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Mansion where ‘My Fair Lady’ was written hosts estate sale

The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain, but the antiques in this historic home are seeking to scatter to the winds.

The Stamford, Connecticut abode where “My Fair Lady” was penned will soon hit the market for roughly $2 million — and ahead of it listing for sale, it’s the site of a multi-day curio fair.

“The estate sale is being held at a historic home, designed by architect Frazier Peters, where in the summer of 1955 Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe wrote the musical ‘My Fair Lady’ while renting the property,” interior designer and antique dealer Francis Merante told The Post of the event, which began this Friday and will continue until this Sunday, Jan. 29. (Specific hours and further details are available on an online listing for the event.) 

Lerner and Loewe’s stage musical was inspired by the 1913 play “Pygmalion” by George Bernard Shaw, and — following its success on Broadway — was made into the same-name 1964 film adaptation starring Audrey Hepburn as the poor flower vendor Eliza Doolittle. 

According to Merante, “The set design of the original production is actually based on the floor plan of the house.” 


A shot of the property.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Following the antique sale, the house itself is set to hit the market for roughly $2 million.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Outdoor decor being sold at the sale.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

The property listing will include its contents.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Various relics up for grabs this weekend.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

The historic home is where “My Fair Lady” was reportedly written.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

An assortment of dolls seeking new homes.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Audrey Hepburn in 1964’s “My Fair Lady.”
Courtesy Everett Collection

Composer Frederick Loewe (left) and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner sit at a piano.
Corbis via Getty Images

The stone house is set to list after the weekend, the first time it will be on the market in nearly half a century as its current resident, a woman named Jakki Peters, has owned it for nearly 40 years. “She has filled it with antiques and decorative objects she collected while traveling the world and shopping local antique stores in New York and Connecticut,” said Merante. “The sale includes many unique antique items including Chinese furniture, Victorian-era furniture and unique garden items from around the estate.”

The main house — as well as its remaining contents, a carriage house apartment, a two-car garage on the property and a 2008 Mini Cooper S — will list with Andrew Smith of Houlihan Lawrence once it formally hits the market.

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Inside California’s ‘Butterfly House’ listed for $998K

If Lisa Frank were to vomit the color wheel all over a house — you’d have 309 Ninth St. This eye-grabbing property, nicknamed the P.G. — because it’s in Pacific Grove, California — Butterfly House stands out so much, it has its own entry in Atlas Obscura.

And now, it’s listed for sale. The asking price for the two-bedroom, two-bathroom, 1,334-square-foot house adorned with hundreds of butterflies: $998,000.

It’s a steal considering Zillow’s “Zestimate” is $1.02 million. Or it’s a scam considering the property was purchased for $37,500 in 1977 — about $191,000 today.

Granted, the house was just an ugly little caterpillar at that point. When the original owners, J and Sonja Jackson, purchased it, it was in such poor condition that the floor collapsed one day while J was washing dishes in the kitchen. Fed up with living in an abode that was falling apart, the retired school counselor took a hammer to the house and brought it down to its studs so he could rebuild it himself.

Multiple butterflies adorn the home’s bright exterior.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
Even the garage comes decked out in butterfly patterns and bright hues.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
A foyer leads inside.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA

The metamorphosis into the cozy cottage it is today took nearly two decades. J started decorating the house in the 1990s when Sonja, the secretary of the Blind & Visually Impaired Center of Monterey County, began suffering from a degenerative eye disease. Despite the fact she was losing her eyesight, they discovered she could still see bright colors. J immediately went out and bought the brightest paints he could find.

Thanks to Sherwin Williams, and her husband’s labor of love, Sonja wasn’t left completely in the dark.

Of course, it’s hard to miss the butterfly theme. Why butterflies? J wanted to pay homage to Pacific Grove’s unofficial mascot: the Monarch butterfly. What’s more, the property — which is just four blocks from the beach — is only a mile away from the Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary. Many of the home’s butterflies were handmade by J in his on-site workshop. He spent an average of six hours a day making them.

Even this bathroom comes with a bold blue tone.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
More colors that extend inside.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
A bedroom with a view into its ensuite bathroom.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
The kitchen.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA

Most of the flutter is found on the exterior of the home, where there’s a sign above the two-car garage that reads, “P.G. Butterfly House.” But there are also butterflies to be found in the bedrooms, the kitchen, the bathrooms and basically every living space. If you were to walk through the house and take a drink every time you saw a butterfly, you wouldn’t be able to walk in a straight line.

“I love the eclectic artwork,” said listing agent Arleen Hardenstein of Sotheby’s International Realty – Pacific Grove Brokerage. “One whimsical section flows to another — it’s very sparkly, fun and pretty.” According to Hardenstein, J passed away a few years ago, and Sonja is selling the home because her needs have changed.

Needless to say, prospective buyers have to be either colorblind or a fan of bright colors to live here.

“A buyer has to love this house and be willing to live in a bit of a ‘fishbowl,’ ” said Hardenstein, who factored in the décor when pricing the home. “The P.G. Butterfly House is well known in the community and attracts a fairly constant stream of visitors who are curious to see it.”

A bathroom that doesn’t shy from color.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
A bright outdoor hangout.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
Another angle of the exterior.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA

Naturally, neighbors haven’t always been fans of having a tourist attraction on their street. “I think it looks like a circus,” neighbor Wendy Davies told the Monterey Herald in 2015. “People drive by, some park in front of my house or block my driveway.”

According to J, one such spectator — who came all the way from south of the border — took a photo of the house to hang in his butterfly store in Mexico City.

“It’s amazing how many people drive by, stop, get out of their cars to look at the property and of course take photos [and] selfies,” said Hardenstein, who says they have a lot of eclectic homes on the Monterey Peninsula, but none are as unique and colorful as this one. Fortunately for Hardenstein, it has great bones.

“The home appears to be in good shape, and the interior is very comfortable,” she said.

So far, she’s received an “enormous amount of interest” from all types of prospective buyers who either love the home, love the story behind the home — or both. Haters — or negative Nancies hooked on neutrals — are gonna hate. After all, colorful cocoons aren’t for everyone. But if you’re looking for Lisa Frank personified, good luck finding a more perfect property.

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US home price plunge is ‘just beginning’ as housing market rapidly cools: economist

A substantial plunge in US home prices is likely “just beginning” as decades-high mortgage rates cause a downturn in the housing market, a prominent economist cautioned Friday.

The warning from Pantheon Macroeconomics chief economist Ian Shepherdson followed more dismal data that showed a slowdown in housing activity.

Pending home sales – a measure based on signed contracts – plunged 10.2% in September, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The pending home sales index has plummeted 35% compared to one year ago, according to Shepherdson.

But cratering demand has only recently started to result in lower home prices – meaning more financial pain is on the way for prospective sellers.

“The bad news is that prices have much further to fall before the market adjusts fully to the collapse in demand,” Shepherdson said in a note to clients.

“Home prices have only recently started to decline on a month-to-month basis,” Shepherdson added. “The resilience in prices was made possible by a lack of existing homes on the market, but supply is now rising — albeit slowly — as homeowners who previously held off on selling worry that further delays will mean they fetch a much lower price.”

Mortgage rates are above 7%.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

As The Post reported, Shepherdson recently warned he expects home prices to fall by 20% by next year – a substantial correction after values hit record highs during the pandemic-era housing boom.

Mortgage rates topped 7% this week for the first time since 2002, according to Freddie Mac. Long-term rates have spiked as the Federal Reserve hikes interest rates to combat inflation.

“The good news is that mortgage rates likely are close to a peak, and if they remain around their current level, sales will find a floor early next year,” Shepherdson added.

Home prices are falling fast in some markets.
Getty Images

Sellers are slashing their asking prices to entice buyers who are facing the worst affordability crunch in decades. Mortgage payments are commanding a much larger share of household income, and while home prices are falling fast, they’re still higher than they were one year ago.

NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun warned that 7% mortgage rates are the “new normal” for buyers until the economy begins to improve.

“Only when inflation is tamed will mortgage rates retreat and boost home purchasing power for buyers,” Yun said.

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