East End home sales surge in fourth quarter, but rise may be temporary
January 28, 2010 12:25AM By Candace Taylor

Images of a seven-bedroom ocean front home in Sagaponack, listed by Town & Country for $11.5 million, that is now in contract
Home sales on the East End of Long Island saw a stunning leap in the fourth quarter of 2009, according to a market report released today by Prudential Douglas Elliman.
The number of sales on the East End, which includes the Hamptons and North Fork, jumped 55.4 percent in the fourth quarter to 564, from 363 in the same quarter of 2008 and 22.9 percent from 459 in the third quarter, the report determined.
In the Hamptons area of Long Island's South Fork, sales skyrocketed 59 percent in the fourth quarter to 409 from 257 in the prior-year quarter, and 20.6 percent from 339 in the third quarter. Median sales prices rose 4.9 percent to $917,900 in the fourth quarter from $875,000 in the same period of 2008, and increased 13.3 percent from $810,000 in the third quarter. However, the average price of a Hamptons home -- $1.59 million -- dipped 12.3 percent from the prior-year-quarter.
The North Fork showed a similar uptick, with sales activity surging 46.2 percent to 155 from 106 in the prior-year quarter. North Fork price trends showed more weakness than the Hamptons, however. The median sales price in the North Fork in the fourth quarter was $450,000, 10 percent less than $500,000 in the same period of 2008.
The fourth quarter saw the highest level of sales on the East End in two years, said appraiser Jonathan Miller, president and CEO of Miller Samuel, who prepared the report. (For a story about the Hamptons residential market over the last decade, click here.)
Industry observers attributed much of the activity to lower prices. "Sellers were finally at the point where they conformed to current conditions and reduced their prices," said Judi Desiderio, the CEO of East End-based Town & Country Real Estate, which released its own Hamptons market report earlier this month. Town & Country's report found that the number of home sales in the Hamptons increased 47 percent year-over-year in the fourth quarter, while the median price rose nearly 13 percent to $985,000 from 2008.
"People were seeking out more value for their dollar," Miller said. "That's evident in the surge in sales activity." Both Miller and Desiderio cautioned that the current spike in activity is deceptive because East End sales have been so anemic for the past several years. "The credit crunch nearly froze most housing markets in the New York City area," Miller said, noting that there were only 201 sales in the first quarter of 2009, the smallest amount his firm has ever tracked. "You're coming from a very low spot."
The number of quarterly sales has nearly tripled since then, but it's still far less activity than during the peak, when some quarters brought around 1,000 East End sales.
"Even with the surge in sales, we're still at about half the peak level," he said.
Miller and Desiderio also emphasized that much of the current activity is due to pent-up demand -- people who put off buying or selling their homes while the market was in free-fall.
"So many people who were on the fence for two years are coming into the market," said Desiderio, whose firm recently put in contract a seven-bedroom home on Daniel's Lane in Sagaponack listed for $11.5 million.
Once the activity from pent-up demand dies down, the market could experience continued weakness.
"The surge in activity has stopped or slowed down the decline in prices," Miller said. "But we're still looking at a weak regional economy and very high unemployment levels. People are more confident and they're not standing on the edge of a financial cliff, but I would not be surprised to see a weaker market going forward until those issues are substantially corrected."
The East End real estate market tends to behave more like New York City than the rest of Long Island, Miller said, because of the large number of Manhattanites who own homes there, a cohort which grew in the past decade.
Long Island proper saw a similar surge in home sales, Elliman found.
The number of sales on Long Island, excluding the East End, jumped 34.1 percent to 5,935 from 4,427 sales in the prior-year quarter, and increased 5.9 percent from 5,603 units in the third quarter, according to Elliman's report. But prices in the area continued to fall slightly. The median sales price of a Long Island home dropped 4.2 percent to $361,000 from $377,000 in the same three months of 2008, and 3.7 percent from the third quarter.
Long Island is "continuing to see price declines, although the pace is easing," Miller said.
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Comments
Anonymous
The anomoly of the 4th quarter of 2008 was a market standstill (based on preceding months, and all that was going on). What has happened is that the sales figures are now closer (but lower) than 2007 figures- a year in which things had slowed, but not come to a standstill. It would be hard not to have a "surge" year over year, from 2008 to ANY year. Next up will be first quarter reports indicating another "surge"- but again, compared to 2007, the numbers will fall far short of stellar.
Comment #1 Posted By: Anonymous 01/28/10
Anonymous
2007 is going to be hard to imitate, in any year going forward.
Comment #2 Posted By: Anonymous 01/28/10
Anonymous
Could you define stellar? Isn't it better for prices to be more affordable, and not have people blindly outbidding each other? Steady sales with slow appreciation is what is needed, not crazy bubbles followed by crashes. It's a good thing that prices are staying pretty steady, they are where they should be - at least somewhat affordable.
Comment #3 Posted By: Anonymous 01/28/10
Anonymous
I think they're still a bit overpriced from pre-bubble levels.
Comment #4 Posted By: Anonymous 01/28/10
Anonymous
sounds like a market redefining itself. thats healthy for the market.
Comment #5 Posted By: Anonymous 01/28/10
Anonymous
every time you quote desiderio, it ruins the credibility of your article.
Comment #6 Posted By: Anonymous 01/29/10
Anonymous
sales are 2-4 months behind here, so 4th qtr 2008 reported sales happened in the summer of 2008...wait until you see 1st qtr 2009! That was the cliff dropp for the Bear/Lehman/AIG disaster
Comment #7 Posted By: Anonymous 01/29/10
Anonymous
I think so long as the banks consider the Hamptons to be a declining or distressed market -- and most do hold that view -- they will be requiring 25-30% down. Many of these houses were built and priced with more flexible downpayments (even as little as 10%). So that, I think, will continue to act as a dampener on sales activity. Either prices are going to have to come down, or lenders will need to loosen up. Or both.
Comment #8 Posted By: Anonymous 02/01/10