See the Coldwell Banker New Listings & Open Houses Today in This Weekend's VIEW Online Now!
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Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
See the Coldwell Banker New Listings & Open Houses Today in This Weekend's VIEW Online Now!
If this message does not display properly,CLICK HERE to view it in your web browser
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
A Complete Look at Spago, Reopened and Refreshed
- 9/28/12 at 9:10 AM
- 1Comment
Wolfgang Puck's iconic Spago Beverly Hills is now open with an entirely new look and menu, the second time L.A.'s favorite Austrian chef-to-the-rich-and-famous and celebrity restaurant mogul has dramatically reinvented his local power spot. The new interior rockets the restaurant right out of the nineties, ditching the wood accents, genial European artworks, and sponged beige walls for a sleek set-up of Armani suit-friendly black chairs and white tablecloths. At first glance, the new 'do appears a little austere compared to the staged rusticity of the old Spago, but there's no question the restaurant has been tailored into sharper focus, with an authoritative presence that includes a classic bar of leather chairs, somber shadows, and glowing backlights, an open kitchen to engage with chef de cuisine Tetsu Yahagi and his team as they execute a new menu heavy on Asian influences, and fun, conceptual contemporary art pieces like a giant iPhone with a cracked screen. And of course, the patio is still heavy with warmth and allure. Take a full look at the new Spago in our slide show and let us know what you think of the restaurant's revamp in our comments.
A Complete Look at Spago, Reopened and Refreshed.
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison Buys Malibu Home From Former Yahoo! CEO Terry Semel
From one CEO to another. Oracle CEO Larry Ellison has added another prime property to his already large collection of homes. The billionaire just bought a beachfront Malibu home from former Yahoo! CEO Terry Semel for $36,943,890, according to the LA Times. The transaction is the most expensive for Malibu this year but actually was a discount for Ellison. Semel originally listed the home for $50 million, recently dropping the price down to $40 million.
The 10,000-square-foot home was built in 1992. Designed by Michael Graves, it’s described as a “jewel on Carbon Beach.” Ellison already owns a few other properties on Carbon Beach, aptly nicknamed “Billionaires’ Row.” He also owns a few homes on the other Billionaires’ Row in San Francisco.
Made up of three pavilions, the home features contemporary architecture with enormous windows and skylights designed to take advantage of the ocean views. The home’s 9 bedrooms and 13 baths include a two-story guesthouse.
This isn’t Ellison’s most significant purchase, however. In June, the CEO dropped a whopping $500 million in a deal that gives him 98 percent of Hawaii’s tiny island of Lanai.
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison Buys Malibu Home From Former Yahoo! CEO Terry Semel for Under $37 Million.
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
U.S. home price index reaches highest level in almost 2 years
The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller index of home values in the 20 largest U.S. cities showed prices rose 1.6% in July from June and 1.2% from a year earlier.
Sixteen of the 20 cities covered by the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index posted year-over-year increases in July. Home prices in Los Angeles increased 1.3% in July from June and rose just 0.4% year-over-year. Above, a home for sale in the Hollywood area in July. (Damian Dovarganes, Associated Press / July 17, 2012)
- Luxury Homes in CaboOcean View Homes, Full Ownership. Cabo San Lucas Best Kept Secret www.ventanasresidences.com
By Jim Puzzanghera and Alejandro Lazo, Los Angeles TimesSeptember 26, 2012
WASHINGTON — Home prices in the nation's biggest cities have risen to their highest level in nearly two years, according to the housing market's leading index, indicating that a strong summer selling season has helped put real estate on its most stable ground since crashing five years ago.The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller index of home values in the 20 largest U.S. cities showed prices rose 1.6% in July from the prior month and 1.2% from July 2011. It was the fourth consecutive monthly improvement, helping cement confidence that the real estate slump is over.
"The news on home prices in this report confirm recent good news about housing. Single family housing starts are well ahead of last year's pace, existing home sales are up, the inventory of homes for sale is down and foreclosure activity is slowing," said David M. Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Housing has snapped back this year even as the broader economy and the nation's employment situation have proved lackluster.
Cash-rich buyers, including private equity investors and big hedge funds, have been scooping up cheaper homes in the nation's hardest-hit areas. Rock-bottom interest rates and low prices have enticed many other buyers as rents have climbed. And the pace of new foreclosed properties has slowed despite dire warnings that a flood of bank-owned properties would hit the market this year.
The result is a lack of inventory that has led to more buyers chasing fewer properties, and attractive properties in competitive markets being scooped up in a matter of days.
Rising home prices will help those who have mortgage balances exceeding the value of their homes. The number of such underwater borrowers has fallen dramatically this year with the improvement in home prices, meaning one of the most stubborn roadblocks to the housing market's recovery is slowly eroding.
Nevertheless, a full throttle housing rebound is unlikely as long as job growth and household incomes remain stagnant. Indeed, the month-over-month improvement in July was not as strong as the improvement seen from June to July, when prices rose 2.3%. Home prices could flatten or even decline in coming months, producing a jagged recovery, and seasonal fluctuations from month to month should be expected, experts said.
"There is a seasonal pattern for house prices. Prices tend to be stronger in the spring and early summer, and then weaker in the fall and winter," Bill McBride, the lead writer for the popular housing blog Calculated Risk, wrote this week. "This should come as no surprise and will not be a sign of impending doom."
Sixteen of the 20 cities covered by the Case-Shiller index posted year-over-year increases in July. Overall, prices in the 20 largest cities in July were still down about 30% from their peak in mid-2006, before the housing market crashed. But prices were up about 8% from their lows in early 2012 and the Case-Shiller index reached its highest point since October 2010.
Atlanta had one of the biggest increases in July compared with June, with prices up 2.6%. The city's real estate market had been struggling, and prices were still down 9.9% year-over-year. Home prices in Los Angeles increased 1.3% in July from June and rose just 0.4% year over year. The biggest improvement from a year earlier was in Phoenix, where prices jumped 16.6%.
The Case-Shiller index compares the latest sales of detached houses with previous sales and accounts for factors such as remodeling that might affect a house's sale price over time.
Consumer confidence rose this month as people said they are more optimistic about their situation and the short-term direction of the economy, according to a report Tuesday by the Conference Board. The group's Consumer Confidence Index climbed nine points in September to 70.3 after declining in August. The increase came as other consumer confidence measures also have risen amid improving economic signs, particularly the rebound in the housing market.
The index is roughly back to its February level, before a jump in gasoline prices and other factors helped drive it down through the spring and early summer.
"Despite continuing economic uncertainty, consumers are slightly more optimistic than they have been in several months," said Lynn Franco, director of economic indicators at the Conference Board.
The index, which is compiled based on polling of consumers, found the percentage of people who saw business conditions as good rose to 15.5% from 15.3% in August. And 8.3% of respondents said jobs were plentiful, up from 7.2% last month.
Consumers also were more upbeat about the direction of the economy over the next six months, with 18.2% expecting business conditions to improve, compared with 16.7% in August. Expectations for continued job growth also rose, as 18.5% of people said they foresaw more jobs in the next six months, up from 15.8%.
With those views, 16.3% of consumers expected their incomes to increase in the coming months, up from 16% in August.
U.S. home price index reaches highest level in almost 2 years.
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
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9/26/2012 @ 3:53PM |1,503 views
Carmageddon II Hits Los Angeles This Weekend!
Last year, I experienced Los Angeles‘ Carmageddon and survived to tell the tale. Now, it’s time for the sequel: Carmageddon II hits the LA freeway system this weekend.
Carmageddon was the clever (or not-so clever, depending on your taste) nickname attached to the temporary closure of Interstate 405 through the Sepulveda Pass, one of the busiest stretches of freeway in the United States. The Sepulveda Pass connects the LA Basin and the San Fernando Valley, and a tie-up on the 405 can impact traffic in the entire metropolitan region. Last year, contractors Kiewit and the Penhall Company demolished and replaced the south half of the Mulholland Drive Bridge in order to facilitate the widening of the 405. The freeway was closed for 36 hours, 17 fewer than originally announced. Angelenos heeded official warnings to avoid the area, and the big event turned into a non-event, as the much-anticipated citywide gridlock failed to materialize.
Construction crews will converge on the north side of the Mulholland Drive Bridge this weekend, Saturday, September 29 through Sunday, September 30. The plan is much like last year’s event: Demolish, remove and replace the bridge while the 405 Freeway is closed to traffic. In other words: Carmageddon II.
Once again, city officials are asking the public to “Plan Ahead, Avoid the Area, or Eat, Shop and Play Locally.” Unfortunately, last year’s non-event may have bred a sense of complacency among LA’s drivers, when there’s actually more of a reason for concern. The original Carmageddon took place in July of 2011, when schools were out of session. This year’s event will have to deal with more resident college students at nearby UCLA and other campuses. MLB’s Los Angeles Dodgers will play two nighttime home games against the Colorado Rockies this weekend, an event that can clog the east side of town, complicating alternate routes. Last year, the Dodgers were on the road against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the freeway closure. It doesn’t take much to upset LA’s delicate traffic ecology — and all of the elements are available this weekend to create a tremendous disturbance.
Zev Yaroslavsky participated in a live Internet chat on the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s website last Friday. Yaroslavsky, an LA County Supervisor, is a member of Metro’s Board of Directors. His advice for Angelenos concluded with the thought, “Be mindful of Carmageddon II and the role you can play in making this a nonevent in our County. Avoid the 405 corridor and its environs. Eat, Shop and Play locally and take advantage of the many discounts and packages that have been made available to the general public that weekend. We are counting on your cooperation and have an enjoyable car free weekend.”
Will Carmageddon II be as uneventful as the original Carmageddon? This is one cliffhanger that will be answered this weekend.
Carmageddon II Hits Los Angeles This Weekend! - Forbes
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
Proper research is essential for homebuyers. Not only should you be familiar with the steps in a real estate transaction, you should also know what your physical and financial needs are.
In a recent broadcast of “Eye on Real Estate with Dottie Herman” titled, “The Art of Negotiations,” Herman, CEO at Douglas Elliman, discussed some important aspects regarding a home’s worth.
Price
“Price is what the home should be worth today. But sometimes people don’t price it right, so what you really want to look at is fair market value,” says Herman. This is what the seller should reasonably be asking for. Recently sold properties are used to help determine fair market value. These sales should be recent, preferably within the last six months, and should be similar in size and upkeep to the property you are considering. Unfortunately, this Comparative Market Analysis, or CMA, may not include all of the details. Keep in mind that the current condition, location and surroundings, as well as the view from the property, can all affect the price of a house.Value
The value of a property is established by the prospective buyer. Herman states that, when it comes to value, “It’s an opinion of what you think the home is worth, based on how you’re going to use it.” Value is calculated based on a person’s lifestyle, so it is different for everyone. For example, a home near public transportation could be more valuable for someone who does not drive than it would be for someone who does.Cost
According to Herman, sellers believe a house is worth what they paid for it plus how much was spent on improvements and other things. In reality, when a seller improves a home, the value of the property is increased, not the cost. Since value is based on the buyer’s preferences, improvements and other extras are all subjective. A seller could receive dissimilar offers from potential buyers because they have made personal decisions about the home’s value.For more information, visit www.elliman.com.
Price, Value and Cost: the Complicated Components of a Home’s Worth.
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale
The 9 Neighborhoods With The Most Million-Dollar Listings
In the U.S., three markets tend to dominate the luxury real estate market—Miami, Los Angeles, and New York.
Google Maps
For the most part, the trend holds true, according to Coldwell Banker, which just released its 2012 luxury market report looking at cities and zip codes with the highest numbers of luxury listings and home sales.
In terms of places with the most $1 million+ homes for sale, California reigned supreme.
#9: PARADISE VALLEY, AZ (85253): 455 homes are on the market for $1 million or more.
Google Earth
#8: LOS ANGELES, CALIF. (90049): 469 homes are for sale for $1 million or more. Of those, 73 are listed for $5 million and up, and 41 of those are $10 million+. Last year, 10 homes in the neighborhood sold for $10 million or more.
Google Earth
#7: LAGUNA BEACH, CALIF. (95651): 488 homes are on the market for $1 million and up. Of those, 76 are $5 million or more, and 25 of those are listed for more than $10 million.
Google Earth
#6 NORTH MIAMI BEACH, FLA. (33160): 498 homes are on sale for $1 million and up.
Google Earth
#5 MIAMI BEACH, FLA. (33139): 507 homes are on the market for $1 million or more. Of those, 106 are listed for $5 million+, and 31 are going for $10 million+. Seven homes sold for $10 million or more in the zip code last year.
Google Earth
#4 MALIBU, CALIF. (90265): 551 homes are on sale for $1 million or more. Of those, 156 are listed for $5 million+, and 66 are on sale for $10 million+. Malibu has the most listings for sale above the $10 million mark of any zip code in the country.
Google Earth
#3 BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. (90210): 569 homes are on sale for $1 million and up. Of those, 184 are listed for $5 million and up, and 56 are on sale for $10 million or more. Beverly Hills also had the most sales of $10 million+ homes last year, at 21.
Google Earth
#2 LA JOLLA, CALIF. (92037): 582 homes are on sale for $1 million and up. Five homes in La Jolla sold for $10 million+ last year.
Google Earth
#1 WESTPORT, CONN. (06880): 586 homes are on sale for $1 million+. But the town didn't even rank in the top 10 when it came to $5 million+ and $10 million+ listings.
Google Earth
Want to know which zip codes are the most expensive overall?
Google Earth
DON'T MISS: The 15 Most Expensive Zip Codes In America >
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Zip Codes With The Most Luxury Listings - Of Course Beverly Hills & Los Angeles are Both on the List.
Posted on: Beverly Hills Real Estate-Beverly Hills Homes For Sale