From the November issue: A year after the financial crisis, Manhattan real estate brokers report that the market is finally returning to normal. But they don’t mean the lightning-fast sales and skyrocketing prices of the recent real estate boom. They’re talking about a more moderate, predictable real estate market, the likes of which hasn’t been seen in Manhattan for years. “The last three years have been very interesting,” said Jill Bane, an associate at Leslie J. Garfield & Co. Before the market cratered as a result of the subprime crisis, “prices were very high and there always seemed to be several competing bids,” she said. Now, however, “a sense of normalcy has returned to the market,” said Bane. Bane represented a townhouse at 17 Bank Street, on the market for $10.5 million, that recently went into contract. “People are buying; they are just not as irrational as the prior two to three seasons.”
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