Financial Industry Bonuses Looking Strong, NYC Luxury Apartment Market Set to Grow
Author: Gea Elika December 10th, 2007 Over the past decade, the luxury apartment market in New York City has been one of the most bull markets in the country. Even as the subprime mortgage crisis enveloped the rest of the country, New York City real estate continued to climb in value. In the previous quarter, for instance, New York City saw the largest increase in property values in the country. During that time, growth in the value of luxury apartments tended to outpace the rest of the city's market. Years of this lopsidedness led to a market that tilted strongly in favor of brokers and sellers. During the first half of 2007, if a buyer was to submit an offer below the asking price, they would likely not even be taken seriously by the owners. However, as worries about the health of the economy as a whole, and the financial industry specifically, began to build this summer, the luxury apartment market began to finally return to something resembling normalcy and equilibrium. Over the past month, there has been much speculation about what the size of annual holiday bonuses for leaders in the financial industry would be. Executives and managers in the financial industry make up such a large segment of luxury apartment buyers in New York City that the size of average bonuses in the industry are a critical variable in determining the direction of the market. On the one hand, profits in the financial industry will be considerably lower this year than last. But on the other, bonuses have been on a strong upward trend for the past several years, irrespective of industry profits. So, it was not clear which direction bonuses will move in. In the past week, however, major New York City-based financial companies
have signaled that bonuses will once again be exceptionally strong.
Articles noting this have begun appearing in Forbes and other major
publications. This publicity may very well push the luxury apartment
market in the city to again start increasing its value.
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