Thursday, April 15, 2010

Hard times in Paradise

The foreclosure crisis catches up with a wealthy, exclusive community in Arizona that once considered itself immune.
By Melinda Fulmer of MSN Real Estate


In 2008, it looked as if Paradise Valley, the wealthiest, most exclusive community in Arizona, had neatly side-stepped the foreclosure crisis.

Only 38 foreclosures were recorded in this 16-square-mile town that year. Indeed, the median home price for resale detached homes reached an all-time high of $2 million in mid-2008, according to MDA DataQuick, even as values plummeted elsewhere.

"People were buying up million-dollar homes, tearing them down and rebuilding them," says Jay Butler, director of the Arizona Real Estate Center at Arizona State University's W.P. Carey School of Business.

The fall
Last year, the bottom dropped out. Like many other luxury-home markets, Paradise Valley joined the foreclosure crisis late: As the economy worsened, companies lost clients and executives lost bonuses or jobs. Affluent residents ran through their savings and credit. And banks, once reluctant to foreclose on major depositors, started taking estates back.



By the end of 2009, the number of foreclosures had tripled to 114, with an additional 315 notices of trustee sale filed, according to the Information Market, a data provider. In most cities, this paltry number wouldn’t even cause a ripple in the real-estate market. But in this tiny town of about 7,700 homes — owned by celebrities, politicians and businessmen such as Muhammad Ali, Alice Cooper, Dan Quayle, Mike Tyson and Peter Sperling — these foreclosures landed with a thud.



Broker sale signs, once considered too gauche for this tony enclave, with its 12 high-end resorts, began sprouting like weeds, as overstretched borrowers began seeking short sales or letting their underwater custom homes go.

Video: Saving American homes key to economic recovery
The excess
Forget Beverly Hills. Some of the priciest foreclosures in RealtyTrac’s database were in tiny Paradise Valley, and all were recorded last year — such as this palatial property with private theater, walk-in wine cellar, indoor sport court and separate guest house with two-car garage, which was taken back by the bank when its owner defaulted on a $6.5 million note. It’s now listed at $3.5 million.

Spec homes, with up to 10,000 square feet of space and as many as eight bathrooms, continued to be built as late as last year.

MSN Money: Why short sales are the new foreclosure
The attitude of most people — even those in the real-estate business — was that economic hardship "doesn’t happen here," says Jon Wall of JM Wall Development, a Phoenix custom homebuilder that was also building in less expensive parts of town.


He says he knew the market was in serious trouble when the list of 12 build-to-suit projects he had been contracted for in Paradise Valley all went up in smoke, as buyers couldn’t find financing. Suddenly, nothing was moving.

He sold his last spec home there in late 2008, taking a major price reduction and barely squeaking out a profit. Others weren’t so lucky.

"We were crying the blues," he says. "But a lot of (spec home builders) shut their doors and went under."

What was left
The remnants of this go-go building activity still litter the landscape — and the multiple listing service.

Many of the projects were left unfinished, such as this 8,000-square-foot Tuscan estate, which boasts a "guest casita," a master bedroom with separate sitting room and a "full Irish pub-style bar," but no flooring, landscaping or kitchen countertops.

"We’ve seen examples of where something that was listed for $10 million sold for $2 million," says luxury real-estate agent Walt Danley, who has sold homes in the area for nearly three decades. "The run-up did get a little out of control. It needed a correction, but this is an overcorrection."

Indeed, with a median per-square-foot price of around $289, according to real-estate Web site Trulia, these homes with their deluxe finishes are a relative bargain for those who can scrape together the financing.



A new nouveau riche?
For those with a steady income, it has meant a chance to finally move into the area that says, "You’ve arrived," Butler says.

Dick and Laurie Wheelock, who own a sprinkler-systems company, traded up from their house in nearby Squaw Peak to a larger 8,500-square-foot spec home built in the Preserve at Lincoln, a new gated community in Paradise Valley near the Arizona Biltmore Resort.

The home, with its wine storage, theater room and three fireplaces, had been originally priced close to $8 million, he said. The Wheelocks picked it up in February for $2.2 million.

"The market just fell apart, and (the builder) was trying to get whatever he could out of it," Dick Wheelock said. "We are enjoying it very much."

On our blog, 'Listed': Families wading through tough times together
A continued correction
Bargains like these should be around for a while, agents and economists say.

Even as local economists are predicting that the Phoenix market will bottom out this spring and that prices will start ticking back up, no one knows exactly when the price reductions will stop in Paradise Valley.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Foreclosures Hit Rich and Famous

The rich and famous now have something in common with hundreds of thousands of middle and lower-class Americans: The bank is about to take their homes.
Houses with loans of $5 million or more will likely see a sharp rise in foreclosures this year, according to a RealtyTrac study for The Wall Street Journal.
Banks had scheduled a foreclosure auction of Richard Fuscone's Westchester County, N.Y., mansion this week. But the former top Wall Street executive declared personal bankruptcy, delaying the auction.
Just this week, a Tudor mansion in Bel-Air belonging to film star Nicolas Cage was in foreclosure auction and reverted to the lender. On Wednesday, Richard Fuscone, a former top Wall Street executive, declared personal bankruptcy, forestalling a foreclosure auction that had been scheduled this week on his 14-acre Westchester mansion. Last month a Manhattan condominium owned by Italian film producer Vittorio Cecchi Gori was sold in a foreclosure auction for $33.2 million.
In February alone, 352 homes nationwide in this category were scheduled for foreclosure auction, the final step before a bank acquisition. That is the largest monthly number of these so-called notices of sale since the financial crisis began. By comparison, in all of 2009, there were 1,312 such notices.
Economists say the super-wealthy are among the last to lose their homes in a mortgage crisis because they usually have high savings, better access to credit and other means for staving off foreclosure. But many of them work in financial services and other industries hit especially hard by the crisis, and have seen their wealth shrink in the market crash.
Developments Blog
The Rich Are Different: They Default More Often
While the numbers are modest compared with foreclosures at other income levels, they suggest the possibility of a sudden spike in bank takeovers of the wealthiest Americans' property. Typically half the notices of sale result in homes being turned over to creditors, though the figure could be slightly lower for the richest Americans who have more financial options, according to Daren Blomquist at RealtyTrac.
Big borrowers are more likely to default than ordinary people, according to data from First American CoreLogic. Its loan database, reflecting more than 80% of the overall home-loan market, includes 1,700 loans with balances of $4 million or more. About 14.8% of those loans were 90 days or more overdue at the end of January, compared with 8.7% for all home loans tracked by First American. Sam Khater, a senior economist at First American, said the bigger borrowers may be more prone to stop making payments when they have lost all their home equity.
Mr. Fuscone, Merrill Lynch's one-time head of Latin America, put his mansion up for sale in November, asking $13.9 million. But he couldn't find a buyer.
The court had scheduled a foreclosure auction for Thursday for the 18,471-square-foot mansion—with two swimming pools, two elevators, six fireplaces, 11 bathrooms and a seven-car garage. The personal bankruptcy filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court Wednesday temporarily freezes the foreclosure process.
Reached by phone, Mr. Fuscone declined to comment. Brokers and real estate tracking companies say that his home is one of the most expensive properties to face foreclosure proceedings yet.
The phenomenon is not limited to the New York area. Banks have taken over homes with loans of $5 million or more in Georgia, North Carolina and Colorado, RealtyTrac says.
Mr. Cage had tried to sell his 11,817-square-foot Bel-Air property for $35 million but failed to get any offers, said James Chalke, a real-estate agent who had the listing. At a foreclosure sale Wednesday, the property attracted no bids from investors and so was acquired by the foreclosing lender. Annett Wolf, a spokeswoman for Mr. Cage, said he had no comment.
A representative of Mr. Cecchi Gori, producer of more than 200 films including "Il Postino" and "Life is Beautiful," said his financial situation is improving.
In Florida's Miami-Dade County, the three largest foreclosure filings initiated against homes in the past six months involved a 4,655-square-foot home in Sunset Islands; a 8,443-square-foot house in Coral Gables; and a condo in Miami Beach, according to Peter Zalewski, a principal of Condo Vultures. All three had mortgages of $3.5 million to $4 million.

Mortgage defaults began to surge in late 2006, mostly among borrowers with subprime mortgages, those for people with weak credit records or high ratios of debt to income.
Over the next few years defaults spread rapidly to better-heeled borrowers, especially those who got loans without documenting their income. At the end of 2009, nearly eight million households, or 15% of those with mortgages, were behind on mortgage payments or in the foreclosure process.
Wealthy people have the means to stretch out the distress process, sometimes for years.
"It's very, very difficult for these people to believe they've had such a severe reversal of fortune," says Maggie Navarro, a real-estate agent in Pasadena, Calif.
Marc Carpenter, a San Diego-based foreclosure specialist, adds that while it's much harder for potential buyers to get loans, there are also fewer buyers who can pay for top-dollar properties. "The upper end is definitely a lagging indicator," he says.
In his bankruptcy filing, Mr. Fuscone provided a list of his debts, including ones to the Greenwich Country Day School, American Express, Mercedes-Benz, a local hardware store, a pet store, and Richards of Greenwich, a fine-clothing store.
"My background is in the financial-services industry and I have been personally devastated by the financial crisis which came to a head in March 2008," Mr. Fuscone said in his bankruptcy declaration. "I have been sued by Patriot National Bank" as part of a foreclosure action. "I currently have no income for the 30-day period" following his bankruptcy petition.
C.W. Kelsey, owner of Greenwich Hardware, was among the local merchants owed money by Mr. Fuscone, though he wouldn't say how much.
"Traditionally, the majority of our credit problems were contractors," he said. "Now there are people you'd never expect two or three years ago to have problems, who live in multimillion dollar homes."—Nick Timiraos and Josh Barbanel contributed to this article.
Write to Craig Karmin at craig.karmin@wsj.com and James R. Hagerty at bob.hagerty@wsj.com