The Conrad Murray case is the district attorney's best shot at dismantling the culture of Dr. Feelgood
Hollywood's A-List Caught in the Housing Squeeze
Even stars like Nic Cage feel the pressure to sell, flooding the market with cut-priced mansions
When Melanie Brown -- better known as Scary Spice -- listed her home perched high in the Hollywood Hills for $2.9 million, it was snatched up by a young, wealthy woman for more than its asking price -- $3.14 million -- after only one day on the market.
If only things were always that easy.
"Mel B's home is an exception to the rule," said Ginger Glass, an agent with Coldwell Banker Previews in Beverly Hills, who has a number of young Hollywood clients. "I thought that was extremely overpriced, and I can't think of anyone else doing a purchase for that price, but I would imagine that a 24-year-old girl was impressed she was buying a Spice Girl's house."
The cache of a celebrity home has been one of the last few glimmers of hope for Southern California real-estate agents trying to hang on in the current economic climate, which has left sales volume in upscale areas like Beverly Hills deflated.
Many stars -- including Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera -- are feeling the effects of the slowdown.
Nicolas Cage, who has a number of pricey properties around the world in locations like the Bahamas and Las Vegas, has been trying to unload his 11,817-square-foot brick Bel Air home since September 2007, according to the blog Real Estalker, which tracks the happenings of celebrity houses. Now the nine-bedroom, nine-bathroom mansion has dropped to nearly half its original asking price – from $35 million to $18.7 million. (See accompanying story for more celebrity real-estate dealings.)
"If they have to reduce the price, they reduce the price -- these are business people. They know what's going on," said Richard Klug of Sotheby's International Realty in Beverly Hills, who recently sold the Malibu home of singer Beck. "Their ego isn't going to get in the way of them selling a house."
"Since September, people have run into trouble with their finances because of the recession," Mike Simonsen, the CEO of Altos Research, a company that provides real-estate statistics, told TheWrap. "So the pressure to sell is happening now at the higher end, and you have a lot of the more expensive properties coming on the market."
Indeed, in the elite 90210 zip code, there are far more homes on the market than in years past -- 211 properties, as compared to 158 last year at the same time, reports Altos.
Glass says people may have been hanging on to their properties because they're not willing to take the loss.
"People used to move from house-to-house and then on to the next thing they see," she said. "Now they aren't making those fast sales because they aren't going to sell their expensive property in a bad market."
The time that these properties are on the market -- from an average of just over three to five months, according to Simonsen -- is also climbing as inventory rises.



Comments
Katie Says
The time that these properties are on the market -- from an average of just over three to five months, according to Simonsen -- is also climbing as inventory rises.games
Amy Rocks Says
I enjoy The Wrap. The reporting opens veins, spills blood, sometimes much needed and deserved. Sharon, you scored when you discovered Amy. She'll only get better working under you. Give her more space on the site, she's earned her chops. Great Job.
NIKKI WHO?
Onaeb Says
These people can keep their homes off the market in hopes of getting a better price later, but it might be very, very much later, as there is no guarantee that the market will be better in 2010 or 2011. It may be worse.
anonymous Says
Great Reporting, nice to see that these guys take a hit as well...maybe these inflated values will get a bit more realistic so that Southern CA gets a bit more in synch with the rest of the real world. Keep up your investigative reporting, we need more of it with print journalism cutting back every day.
Tom L Says
Interesting.