ReportWire

Tag: Residential real estate

  • Trump Organization Expands in India, Where Many of Its Partners Face Accusations

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    GURUGRAM, India—When the Trump Organization in April announced another luxury real-estate project in India, Eric Trump gave a shout out to his local partners for helping accelerate the brand’s expansion.

    “We’re incredibly excited to launch our second project in Gurgaon,” Eric Trump, who runs day-to-day operations, using the former name for the city near New Delhi. “And even prouder to be doing it once again with our amazing partners.”

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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    Rory Jones

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  • Compass acquires Anywhere in $1.6B real estate merger | Long Island Business News

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    The residential world was rocked Monday with news of the industry’s largest-ever consolidation.   

    Compass announced a $1.6 billion deal to acquire Anywhere Real Estate in an all-stock transaction. 

    The acquisition will make Compass the world’s largest residential real estate firm with an enterprise value of about $10 billion, according to a joint statement from the two publicly traded companies. 

    Once the transaction is completed in the second half of 2026, Compass, which also owns Christie’s International Real Estate, will take over Anywhere’s brands, including Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate, Century 21, Coldwell Banker, Coldwell Banker Commercial, Corcoran, ERA and Sotheby’s International Realty. 

    With the merger of the two real estate giants, Compass will have 340,000 real estate professionals globally serving about 120 countries and territories. The company, which was already the top brokerage firm before the acquisition, reported 2024 revenue of $5.629 billion.  

    Compass CEO and founder Robert Reffkin said he has “deep respect” for Anywhere’s leadership, agents, employees, culture and brands.  

    “By bringing together two of the best companies in our industry, while preserving the unique independence of Anywhere’s leading brands, we now have the resources to build a place where real estate professionals can thrive for decades to come,” Reffkin, who will continue to lead the combined companies, said in the statement. 

    The consolidation of Compass and Anywhere is expected to cut combined operating costs by about $255 million a year by combining operations and eliminating redundancies. Compass projects it will complete 1.2 million home sales annually as a result of the merger and add more than $1 billion in sales from Anywhere’s established franchise, title and escrow, and relocation operations, according to the statement. 

    Here on Long Island, where most of the brands involved in the merger are prominent, brokers differ on the local significance of the deal. 

    Joseph Sabella, owner of Oakdale-based RealPro Consulting, said the Compass/Anywhere merger isn’t likely to have any major implications for the Long Island real estate market.  

    “Our market is largely driven by local inventory, pricing, and relationships,” Sabella told LIBN. “Where we may see ripple effects is on a national level, particularly in how the combined company positions itself against major players like Zillow and even the National Association of Realtors. It’s a strategic move, but its influence will be felt more broadly across the industry than here at home.” 

    Peter Morris, founder and co-owner of Huntington-based Signature Premier Properties said the of Anywhere is a bold but risky deal.  

    “They are taking on significant debt, and ‘s immediate response has not been favorable, with their stock falling following the announcement,” Morris said in a written statement. “Growth and consolidation on this scale always comes with challenges. We know firsthand that agents do not like change and for those at Coldwell Banker, Corcoran, or other Anywhere brands, change is inevitable. The forecast of $255 million in savings points to layoffs, office consolidations, tech platform shifts, and leaner marketing departments.” 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Coupon mogul George Ruan sells Bel-Air estate for $140M

    Coupon mogul George Ruan sells Bel-Air estate for $140M

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    Online coupon mogul George Ruan has sold a 21,000-square-foot home in Bel-Air for $140 million, among the priciest deals in Los Angeles.

    The co-founder of the Downtown-based Honey traded the 1.15-acre hilltop estate at 10721 Stradella Court, the Wall Street Journal reported. The buyer was undisclosed.

    Brokers Aaron Kirman, Kirby Gillon and Bryce Lowe of Christie’s International Real Estate Southern California held the initial listing.

    The off-market deal comes during a slowdown of luxury deals due to L.A.’s “mansion tax,” or Measure ULA, which requires sellers to pay 4 percent on homes between $5.15 million and $10.3 million, and 5.5 percent on properties at $10.3 million or above. 

    Ruan bought the unfinished house in 2020 for $60 million, then completed a multi-million dollar makeover.

    The nine-bedroom, 11-bathroom mansion, designed by South Africa-based SAOTA and Mid-Wilshire-based Woods + Dangaran, has sweeping views of the city and the Pacific Ocean.

    The two-story concrete home has a media room, library, powder room and a gym, with a pool and spa that jut over a steep embankment. A dining room features wood panels that can pivot to close off the room. The estate has parking for 10 cars, according to Zillow.

    There’s also a one-bedroom guesthouse with its own pool. 

    In 2022, Ruan listed the home for $150 million, then removed it nine months later.

    Its sale for $140 million doesn’t come near the $210 million that Eyeglasses mogul James Jannard fetched in June for a nearly 10-acre estate in Malibu, shattering the state record.

    In 2022, Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, paid $133 million for a 5-acre estate with a 19,000-square-foot mansion and a 6,600-square-foot “guest mansion” in Bel-Air. In 2020, Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos bought a 9-acre estate in nearby Beverly Hills for $165 million, a then-state record.

    In 2012, Ruan co-founded Honey, which helps consumers find discount codes for online purchases, according to the newspaper. In 2020, the year he bought his Bel-Air estate, he sold Honey to PayPal Holdings for $4 billion. He’s now an active angel investor in more than 50 companies.

    — Dana Bartholomew

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    Coinbase founder buys Bel Air manse for $133M


    Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos with the home (Credit: Pintrest and Getty Images)

    Jeff Bezos buys David Geffen’s Beverly Hills estate for record $165M


    A year into Measure ULA, a stiff real estate market in the city


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    TRD Staff

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  • Residential Brokers Discuss Sales After Measure ULA

    Residential Brokers Discuss Sales After Measure ULA

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    Though Measure ULA has disproportionately affected the commercial industry, agents who sell the top 1 percent of real estate in the city of Los Angeles have also taken a hit. 

    Some say their clients are now more focused on Beverly Hills or Malibu, neither of which has its own transfer taxes. A handful said buyers are coughing up the cash anyway. Others are hopeful that Measure ULA will be overturned through the November ballot measure. 

    The Real Deal spoke to a number of top residential agents in the city of Los Angeles to get their thoughts on the transfer taxes and how they think the market has changed over the last year.  

    “There’s always the three D’s — death, divorce and disparities.” 
    Josh Flagg, Compass

    Flagg, the star of “Million Dollar Listing L.A.” who recently jumped to Compass from Douglas Elliman, said some people are always going to need to sell.

    “But, with that said, adding 5 percent onto the purchase price is never going to be a good situation for anybody,” he said. For the most part, Flagg said his clients understand. “It is what it is.” 

    Flagg also noted that sellers can’t raise their prices to take ULA into account, given that demand and pricing overall have softened. 

    “It doesn’t mean houses went up another 5 percent just because of this ULA tax,” he said. “A lot of sellers might be adding it on top of it, but it’s silly to do that because you’re just adding 5 percent over the value of your house.”

    “Unless they have to move, people are not keen on taking a large hit.” 
    Stuart Vetterick, Hilton & Hyland

    It’s hard to blame the huge drop in sales to just Measure ULA, Vetterick said. There’s also the huge rise in interest rates and the fact that presidential election years generally bring a slowdown in sales. 

    But without a doubt, there are people who are “looking to buy in Los Angeles, but will not buy in the city of Los Angeles,” he said. 

    People over the age of 70, long-term homeowners who see property as a “nest egg,” are the ones “losing the most,” Vetterick said. 

    One set of his clients looking to sell have been in their house for 11 years and have taken out loans against the property over time, accumulating significant debt. The home is likely to sell for over $10 million, meaning the client will have to shell out at least $550,000 in cash including the tax. 

    “That’s their retirement fund,” he said. 

    “I’ve lost an immeasurable number of clients to other states.” 
    Jason Oppenheim, The Oppenheim Group

    A number of Oppenheim’s clients are “either hesitant or have decided definitively not to sell because of the tax,” he said. 

    Oppenheim said more of his wealthy clients have left in California in the last two years than over the last 10, with many critical of increased taxation. 

    “We’ve dug a 2-foot grave and are continuing to dig,”he said of Measure ULA, noting that the city has not reached its revenue estimates. “I’m not opposed to taxation philosophically. I’m opposed to inefficiency.”

    Many of his clients are moving to Florida, Nevada, Arizona and Texas — or even Orange County. 

    If more continue to leave, the city of L.A. is going to lose a significant chunk of its wealthy tax base, he said. 

    “I’ve seen developers walk away from projects saying there’s not enough of a profit margin now.”
    Carl Gambino, Compass

    Much of Los Angeles’ luxury market is product from spec home developers — investors who build properties from scratch. If more developers walk away, citing Measure ULA, agents and buyers could be left with less product to market and purchase.

    In the months leading up to Measure ULA coming into effect, Gambino said, he closed a number of large deals, including Mark Wahlberg’s $55 million sale of a home in Beverly Park. 

    If Wahlberg, who then moved to Las Vegas, had sold two weeks later, he would have been on the hook for $3.025 million in city transfer taxes. 

    Since then, “it’s definitely slowed down transactions in some capacity,” Gambino said, echoing other agents interviewed by TRD. “Some sellers have literally just decided they’re just not going to sell because of the tax, and some of them believe that it could be overturned.”

    “There was an overabundance of properties for lease.”
    Sally Forster Jones, Compass

    Can’t sell? Lease instead. 

    Many with $5 million homes in 2023 decided not to sell but rather to try their luck at renting the property they otherwise might have sold. 

    Rental prices came down in 2023 as the number of properties on the market went up, according to Forster Jones. 

    “Clearly, the contributing factor was that the sellers did not want to sell or chose not to sell,” she said. “They decided instead they were going to put their homes up for lease.” 

    Forster Jones also had many conversations with her clients about what listing prices would be at the $5 million mark — the trigger for the initial Measure ULA tax tier of 4 percent. 

    “The discussion was always, ‘Do we put it up for sale over $5 million?’” she said. “Selling property at $5,000,002, the seller was going to net less than if they had put the property up for sale at $4,999,000.” 

    “ULA was a horrible measure. It was written terribly. It’s not a mansion tax, it’s a real estate tax. In a city that needs housing, it was the worst thing that anybody could have created.” 
    Aaron Kirman, AKG | Christie’s International

    Kirman, whose brokerage did $2 billion in sales volume last year, said anything between $20 million and $200 million was “very difficult to sell.” 

    Sellers of $10 million-plus properties did not want to pay a 5.5 percent transfer tax, plus commissions, generally at another 5 percent, plus closing costs of 2 percent. 

    “Sellers were looking at a 12 percent closing fee before they even got out of bed.” Kirman said. “And that was very difficult for people to stomach — it still is, by the way.”

    Kirman echoed the same sentiment about spec home developers — the transfer taxes are cutting into profit margins, meaning developers will just stop building. 

    “To be able to buy a piece of dirt anywhere in the city is running between $1.5 million and $3 million, sometimes $4 million to $7 million or more,” he said. “By the time you build and develop, you’re over the $5 million threshold, and developers are not going to run and build houses if it doesn’t make sense.”

    However, in 2024, Kirman thinks things have started to settle. 

    “We’ve seen a lot of high-end luxury buyers back down to the market, we’re seeing a lot of sales,” he said. “I’ve had more billionaires call me in the last three months than I had the whole of last year, an interesting indication of where we are.”

    “The margins have become slimmer and slimmer — now with [Measure ULA], in a lot of cases, it just won’t make sense to build a house anymore.” 
    Santiago Arana, The Agency

    From Arana’s vantage point, Measure ULA is leading to less spec home development, and eventually, less inventory. 

    Arana, who is hoping ULA will be overturned with the passage of the Taxpayer Protection Act in November, said it’s hard to keep being an advocate for the city of Los Angeles. 

    “I’m going to think twice if I want to reinvest that money, that I’m gonna put it here in Los Angeles,” he said. “I’m going to invest [in a state] that is more friendly, tax-wise, for entrepreneurs like me, who are trying to diversify as a real estate agent.” 

    Arana also echoed Vetterick’s concerns about elderly people, noting they are a subset of the market more likely to be affected by a 4 percent or 5.5 percent transfer tax. 

    “If I want to sell the house to use that equity to go and live comfortably in a retirement home, but I gotta pay four and a half percent on the setbacks of that,” Arana said, “that very well could be a substantial amount of the money that I was planning on using.” 

    “And by the way, my $5 million house is not going to be a mansion. In Los Angeles, with $5 million, it is not really a mansion,” he added.

    — Daria Solovieva contributed reporting

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    Isabella Farr

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  • “CSI” Creator Sells Malibu Beach House for $15M

    “CSI” Creator Sells Malibu Beach House for $15M

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    Anthony Zuiker, the mastermind behind the television franchise “CSI,” sold his beach house in Malibu for $15.3 million on Feb. 15, according to the listing on Zillow.

    The property, which is located at 31504 Victoria Point Road, is a single-family, four-story house built in 1976.

    Zuiker bought it from basketball star Kevin Durant in 2019 for $12.15 million, according to data compiled by Zillow and media reports at the time.

    It’s a moderately priced home for Malibu, with recent sales including interior designer and developer Saffron Case selling a 4,000-square-foot house along Carbon Beach for about $29 million in December.

    Also in December, rapper and entrepreneur Kanye West sold his home for $53 million, after purchasing it for $57.25 million two years prior. Last year, Beyonce and husband Jay-Z paid $200 million for a Malibu mansion, the highest price for a home in California history.

    Zuiker was looking to rent out the Malibu beach house last year for $90,000 per month and then listed it for sale in September, according to Zillow records.

    Back in 2019, the television producer sold another Malibu property, a 5,500-square-foot home, to NBA player Chandler Parsons for $9.25 million, Variety reported.

    The house features a third-story entrance, family room, kitchen, dining room, bedroom and the grand living room with ocean views, according to listing notes. Down one level is a mezzanine-style sitting room and two ensuite bedrooms. The bottom floor is a beach-level media suite, plus a full kitchen and a guest bedroom. The top floor includes an office space.

    Chris Cortazzo of Compass held the listing. David Parnes and James Harris with The Agency represented the unidentified buyer.

    Zuiker as well as the agents representing both sides of the deal did not respond to a request for comment.

    The show “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” launched in 2000 focused on the Las Vegas Police Department. The concept later spawned three other television series.

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    Daria Solovieva, Isabella Farr

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  • Home buyers thought mortgage rates were finally going to go down. Why hasn’t it happened yet?

    Home buyers thought mortgage rates were finally going to go down. Why hasn’t it happened yet?

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    Why are mortgage rates still so high?

    After a year of mortgage rates near 8%, home buyers are eager for good news. Some forecasters have buoyed their hopes, estimating that the rate on the 30-year mortgage will drop to 6% or lower this year. 

    But rates have not fallen by much thus far. The 30-year rate is currently averaging 6.64%, according to Freddie Mac. That’s despite the fact that the U.S. Federal Reserve hasn’t raised its benchmark interest rate since July 2023 and signaled in December that it would cut that rate in 2024. Meanwhile, economists in the real-estate sector have been anticipating a drop in mortgage rates since last fall.

    “Homebuyers may be feeling like the lower mortgage rates they’ve been promised in 2024 are not materializing,” Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist at Bright MLS, said in a statement. In a recent survey of Americans’ feelings about the housing market, 36% of respondents said they expect mortgage rates to fall in the next 12 months.

    While the Fed doesn’t set mortgage rates, it can influence them, just as it influences the overall U.S. economy through monetary policy. But even though the central bank has hit the brakes on tightening monetary policy, with the economy giving off mixed signals of strength and weakness, the timing of anticipated cuts to the benchmark rate remains unclear.

    That in turn creates uncertainty about when mortgage rates will drop enough to “unfreeze” the housing market. Home buyers are probably going to have to wait until the Fed acts definitively before they see those lower rates.

    The effect of a strong economy

    The strength of the U.S. economy is one reason mortgage rates have not yet fallen much, economists say. The job market is still hot, and inflation remains higher than the Fed’s goal, which is why the latest read on inflation, out Feb. 13, will be so closely watched. The fact that rates haven’t fallen this year is “a result of uncertainty about the economy and the timing of the Fed’s rate cuts,” Sturtevant said.

    “The strong job market is good news for the spring buying season, as higher household incomes are a necessary component, but it also means that mortgage rates are not likely to drop much further at this point,” Mike Fratantoni, chief economist at the Mortgage Bankers Association, told MarketWatch.

    Another reason mortgage rates are still high is that lenders are trying to protect themselves against lower rates in the future, Cris deRitis, deputy chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told MarketWatch. If rates fall, lenders run the risk that a borrower will pay off a loan early by refinancing. That would limit how much in interest that lender could expect to make.

    “In an odd sort of way, then, the expectation that mortgage rates will be lower in the future can lead lenders to increase rates today to compensate for the prepayment risk,” deRitis said. 

    Lower rates, more competition among buyers

    So when can prospective buyers expect mortgage rates to fall significantly? 

    “Homebuyers should expect mortgage rates to move lower as we head through 2024,” Sturtevant said. While Fannie Mae expects rates to fall below 6% by the end of the year, other economists, like Fratantoni, expect the 30-year rate to finish the last quarter of 2024 at 6.1%.

    But even if rates do fall, that won’t necessarily mean buyers will be better able to afford a home, because a drop in rates could heat up competition for homes even as it boosts buyers’ purchasing power.

    “There is still very low inventory in the market, and buyers need to act quickly when they find the right home for them,” Sturtevant said.

    For the many homeowners who currently have a mortgage rate below 4%, rates stuck in the 6% range may be leading them to put off plans to sell their home and buy a new one.

    But it’s worth noting that since 2000, rates on 30-year mortgages have ranged from a high of about 8.62% to a low of 2.81%, averaging about 5% over that span. And compared with the historical average of the 1970s, which was 7.7%, the current rates in the 6% rage are not that high, deRitis noted.

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  • For LA Home Brokers, January Brings Active Start to Year

    For LA Home Brokers, January Brings Active Start to Year

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    The year started on a bullish note for L.A. residential sellers, with a solid uptick in signed contracts and an increase in listings in January.

    During the first month of the year there were 1,650 signed contracts, a 5.4 percent increase from the 1,565 new signed contracts in January 2023, according to information collected in the Elliman Report. It was a 2.4 percent increase in new signed contracts compared to the previous month of December 2023.

    There was a 5.8 percent increase in new listings in a year-over-year comparison. In January there were 1,932 new listings compared to 1,826 new listings for the same month in 2023. However, it was a 96 percent increase in a month-to-month comparison. In December there were 988 new listings, according to The Elliman Report.

    Top agent Sally Forster Jones of Compass said that the second week of January marked a change for her 30-person group. 

    “Activity had become more brisk. I started getting more phone calls then,” Jones said.

    One reason for the change in pace was the calendar. Home buyers and sellers typically show more interest in getting involved in the market at the start of the year, Jones said. She also noted there has been a lot of pent-up demand after 2023 which was seen as a slow year for the real estate market.

    A bullish stock market has made buyers more confident with buying homes. Many buyers want to get ahead of housing trends.

    “There’s more of an urgency,” Jones said. “Buyers are stepping up now because prices will increase in 2024.”

    Economists such as Sam Khater at Freddie Mac forecast that home prices would increase at a steady rate across the nation.

    The Los Angeles condo market showed new life in January, according to The Elliman Report. There were 606 new signed contracts for L.A. area condos during the month, a 16.8 percent year-over-year increase. There also was an about 8 percent increase in a month -to-month comparison from new signed contracts in December, when there were 562 new signed condo contracts.

    There was a 97 percent month-to-month surge in condo listings. In January, there were 790 new condo listings compared to  December when there were 400. 

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    Andrew Asch

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  • LA Home Brokers Mull Fed’s Pledge for Steady Rates Ahead

    LA Home Brokers Mull Fed’s Pledge for Steady Rates Ahead

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    L.A. real estate professionals reported mixed opinions to the Federal Reserve Bank statement on Jan. 31 that the government’s interest rates would stay between 5.25 and 5.5 percent.

    For some agents, the announcement brought relief that the market would hold steady; others see an uptick in transactions. Douglas Elliman’s Stephen Kotler said that no change is better than the skyrocketing rates of 2023. 

    “It’s actually good for agents,” Kotler explained. “It feels much better that we’re not on a roller coaster.” Kotler is CEO of brokerage for the Western Region at Douglas Elliman.

    The Fed announcement was a welcome change from the 2023 market, added Shelton Wilder, founder of Shelton Wilder Group Christie’s International Real Estate in West L.A. 

    “Last year felt like quicksand. But this year we’re having huge turnouts and multiple offers on homes,” she said. “It has been a long time since we’ve had a 3 percent rate. People have accepted rates more. It’s a more active market.”

    Jennifer Lind, Western Regional president of Coldwell Banker Realty, said that mortgage rates would be just one part of  L.A.’s complex market — plenty of other factors influence home sales.

    “We’ve got an affordability problem and an inventory problem — interest rates are just one part of it,” Lind said. “The stock market has been great. For  a lot of our clients, stock prices might have a lot more impact than interest rates.”

    For Stephen Shapiro, co-founder of Westside Estate Agency in Beverly Hills, the announcement was a proverbial nothing burger. 

    “It might affect the stock market, not the real estate market,” Shapiro said. “It won’t encourage someone to buy or not to buy a home. The difficulty is finding a house (buyers) like at a price they like.”

    For mortgage lender Jason Hecht of Guaranteed Rate, the past year was the slowest time in his  almost 30-year career. He forecast that the market is on the verge of opening up. 

    “I’m bullish on where rates will be headed in the next quarter,” Hecht said. “The average 30-year fixed rate loan is just above 6.5, according to [marketplace platform] Optimal Blue. I’m pretty bullish on the average 30-year fixed-rate loan dropping by half a percent by this summer.”

    The Fed announcement should have no effect on apartment rentals, said Taylor Avakian, founder of  Los Angeles-based The Group CRE at Lyon Stahl Investment Real Estate. But the steady-state of lending rates will prove frustrating for people who trade residential buildings. 

    “A lot of people were banking on rates coming down; they had old loans and they were doing capital calls,” Avakian said. “They were kicking the can down the road. Now that a cut won’t be happening any time soon, you’re going to see a lot more sellers — there’s going to be a lot more transactions in the next quarter.”

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    Andrew Asch

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  • Alon Abady Trades Beverly Hills Mansion for $24M

    Alon Abady Trades Beverly Hills Mansion for $24M

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    An LLC managed by commercial real estate investor Alon Abady of Waterfall Bridge Capital has traded the mansion at 910 North Alpine Drive in Beverly Hills for $24 million, or $2,315 per square foot, according to public records.

    The buyer got the mansion at a steep discount of about 31 percent off the home’s original listing price, according to public records. In January 2023, it listed for $35 million and spent the last year on and off the market. 

    The buyer is a group of LLCs which purchased the home in a tenants-in-common deal. The Delaware-based entities share the same moniker of Vinter Ramca. The LLC named Vinter Ramca II got a 48 percent interest in the house, while Vinter Ramca I got a 26.2 percent interest and Vinter Ramca got a 26.8 percent interest.  

    The identity of the agents handling the deal was unclear. Drew Fenton of Carolwood Estates had listed the mansion in the past. 

    The 10,000-square-foot home at 910 North Alpine is one of a handful of ultraluxe Beverly Hills properties that sold in the past four weeks., according to a Zillow search. The 12,000-square-foot mansion at 1130 Carolyn Way sold for $18.5 million on Jan. 17, and a six-bedroom, three-bath home at 631 North Crescent Drive traded for $23.5 million on Dec. 29.

    Abady has experience with luxury mansions, but his biggest deals are commercial. He paid a reported $35 million in March 2023  for 9911 West Pico Boulevard, a 15-story Century City office building. Abady planned to redevelop the 250,000-square-foot building, according to an announcement from Kevin Shannon of Newmark, who represented the sellers group led by Blackstone. The deal was penned shortly before the Measure ULA wealth transfer tax went into effect.

    In 2021, Abady spent $96 million to purchase the Sofitel Hotel in Beverly Hills. He also sold a mansion at 661 Doheny Drive in Beverly Hills for $23 million in October 2022. 

    Abady did not reply to a call requesting comment.

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    Andrew Asch, Christian Bautista

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  • Chicago-Area Mansion Listed for $10.5 Million Under Contract

    Chicago-Area Mansion Listed for $10.5 Million Under Contract

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    A sprawling seven-bedroom Naperville mansion, listed at $10.5 million, has gone under contract, which could make it a record-breaker

    If the sale surpasses $8.1 million, it will set a new benchmark in DuPage County, the Chicago Tribune reported.

    Lauren Dayton of Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty represents the seller, Thomas F. Harter Sr., a former Navistar executive.

    Constructed in 2017 by homebuilder Dave Knecht, the Tudor-style residence at 1112 Shamrock Court spans 21,700 square feet on a 2.5-acre lot. It has nine full bathrooms, three half bathrooms, leaded casement windows, and eight fireplaces.

    The home also features a great room with a floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace and French doors, a kitchen with dual islands and modern appliances.

    Additional amenities include a hearth room, a library with custom wood built-ins, and a primary bedroom suite on the main level, complete with a custom turret, and wet bar.

    Entertainment options on the lower level include a sports bar, a movie theater, a fitness room, billiards room, and a private spa. The home also features a 3,000-bottle wine cellar. 

    Outdoor amenities include a bluestone patio, outdoor fireplace, gas fire pit, pool, infinity spa, and pool house.

    It’s far from the only big-ticket Chicago-area home to hit the market recently.

    Last week, former Chicago Cub Kerry Wood and his wife have listed their Georgian Revival-style mansion in Winnetka for $8.5 million.

    Jena Radnay of @properties has the listing.

    Wood, known for, among other things, striking out 20 batters as a rookie in a shutout against the Houston Astros in 1998, pitched for the Cubs from 1998 to 2008 and returned for his final two seasons.  He is currently a Cubs Ambassador and was recently elected to the team’s Hall of Fame.

    The Woods bought the three-story mansion in 2019 through an off-market transaction, using an Illinois limited liability company. 

    Built in 1902 for railroad executive Charles I. Sturgis and designed by architect William Otis, the mansion boasts a curved red brick perimeter wall and wrought iron gates.

    — Ted Glanzer

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    TRD Staff

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  • Hot 2024 Real Estate Trends Feature Wellness Benefits

    Hot 2024 Real Estate Trends Feature Wellness Benefits

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    Zillow recently announced its six hottest home trends to watch for in 2024. Four of them are wellness related. No one should be surprised by this, as homeowners are increasingly acknowledging and appreciating the links between their living spaces and quality of life. That’s showing up in both home improvement and resale reports.

    Here are the trends the real estate platform cited, and why designers and real estate professionals interviewed in writing about them agree — with a few caveats.

    Sensory Gardens and Pathways

    What Zillow reported:

    “Sensory gardens have been surging in popularity, with homeowners and home buyers prioritizing functional and beautiful outdoor space as a way to reconnect with nature. Listings mentioning sensory gardens or pathways are up 314% compared to last year.”

    Zillow home trends expert Amanda Pendleton ties this popular amenity to the extended time we spent at home during the pandemic increasing our passion for connecting with nature. “Sensory gardens concentrate those benefits by engaging all five senses,” she shared.

    They’re appearing most often in Philadelphia and Chicago metro areas, she noted.

    What Experts Say:

    “The demand for sensory outdoor experiences has been growing, driven by families and work-from-home professionals who value both educational outdoor spaces for children and a tranquil environment to offset home offices,” noted Megan Majd with Compass on Los Angeles’ Westside. She sees potential marketability enhancement from these features. “Greenery and outdoor spaces are always on the wishlist for buyers. Sensory gardens cater to a particular clientele who is aware of the wellness value these bring to their lives.”

    Charleston, South Carolina-based landscape architect Glenn Gardner commented, “Sensory gardens and paths are a part of nearly all [our] projects, whether they are specifically requested or not — as I use them as a part of good design.” He includes fragrant elements like jasmine, gardenia, citrus blossoms, and tea olives. “It’s also wonderful to integrate an occasional edible like blueberries or figs along a pathway to grab a few while in the garden and eat while wandering. I am also a big fan of tucking herbs into the landscape, being able to run out and grab some sprigs of rosemary, bay leaves, thyme and oregano.”

    Cold Plunge Pools

    What Zillow reported:

    “Cold plunge pools are the hottest wellness trend of 2024, touted by influencers as a way to improve circulation and reduce inflammation. The share of listings that feature an at-home cold plunge pool is up 130% compared to last year.”

    Pendleton commented, “We typically see built-in cold plunge pools as a feature in luxury homes, but there are an increasing number of portable plunge pools now on the market. From large plug-in models to inflatable plunge pools, anyone can get the benefits of a cold-plunge pool at all different price points, making this wellness trend more accessible than ever.”

    Cold plunge pools are most frequently mentioned in for-sale listings in Stamford, Connecticut and Las Vegas.

    What Experts Say:

    Los Angeles-based Sally Forster Jones with Compass declared, “Anyone at the higher end of the market sees this as a new requirement, and if there isn’t a cold plunge, they are having one installed.”

    “In recent years people seem to have the attitude that they will definitely get their money back (or perhaps more) with a tastefully designed pool,” Gardner observed. He does point out that cold plunge pools aren’t being driven by the same whole household impulses as other recreational features. “It tends to be just one family member who has embraced the therapy and wants to enjoy it at home as opposed to having to go to the gym or spa.”

    Pickleball Courts

    What Zillow reported:

    “This fast-paced paddle sport is becoming a sought-after amenity in backyards and neighborhoods. Nationwide, pickleball mentions are up 64% compared to last year.”

    “Pickleball is accessible and appealing to all ages,” Pendleton observed, noting that it offers both fitness and social interaction benefits. “With the sport’s rising popularity, a dedicated at-home or nearby neighborhood pickleball court has become a selling point for many homebuyers.”

    Mentions of pickleball courts are most common in for-sale listings in Sarasota and Provo, Utah.

    What Experts Say:

    “As the wellness movement continues to build momentum, buyer expectations are becoming more sophisticated,” shared New York City-based real estate agent Taylor Middleton of Douglas Elliman. She serves that metro, the Hamptons, and South Florida. “My clients — in particular my international and California buyers — are prioritizing contemporary options.” She sees pickleball courts (and plunge pools) likely having the most enduring appeal and value enhancement among the four Zillow wellness trends. Ultimately, Middleton surmised, “The main resale appeal is that in time, these amenities will become buyer expectations.”

    “Pickleball has definitely been a family recreation conversation,” Gardner reported, citing its physical and social benefits, as well as the fact that it takes less space than tennis. “We have clients hosting parties at home based around pickleball tournaments with groups of friends. In several cases it’s being used as a destination activity to draw friends and family over to spend time.”

    It’s worth noting that the noise and lights of pickleball courts can be a negative factor for some properties and communities.

    Murals

    What Zillow reported:

    “Homeowners and home buyers are saying goodbye to bland in favor of personality-packed homes. Murals are showing up 18% more often in for-sale homes and they’re more accessible than ever. Wallpaper murals are now readily available and depict all types of scenes, from large-scale landscapes to modern botanicals.”

    Pendleton commented that “Personalization is a growing trend in interiors as homeowners increasingly want their homes reflect who they are and how they live. Murals make a visual statement, create ambiance and can be an instant conversation starter.”

    Murals are most commonly found in for-sale listings in McAllen, Texas and Tucson.

    What Experts Say:

    “When done properly, and pending the home’s target homebuyer, a mural can certainly add to a home’s appeal. Especially for a younger homebuyer,” stated Orange County, California Compass agent Todd Davis.

    Architect William Court practicing in Savannah and Bluffton, South Carolina shared that, “We have used custom murals and wall coverings on a number of homes. Each one tends to present a unique point of view and is often highly personal to our clients. It is an impact statement, so it takes a certain sense of commitment on their behalf.” He does not anticipate that these design statements will benefit the home’s real estate value. “Resale did not come into the conversation, but the sense of quality and finish were certainly discussed,” he noted. He did relate that one of the projects unexpectedly became a spec house and the new owner was attracted to the hand painted panels in the study.

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    Jamie Gold, Contributor

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  • OneKey CEO, industry leaders optimistic about housing market | Long Island Business News

    OneKey CEO, industry leaders optimistic about housing market | Long Island Business News

    [ad_1]

    Real estate industry leaders expressed optimism for the New York area’s housing market at a virtual panel discussion held last week. 

    Hosted by OneKey MLS and the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors, the panel included Richard Haggerty, the newly minted CEO of OneKey MLS; Kevin Brown, senior global real estate advisor at Sotheby’s International Realty; Elizabeth Stribling-Kivlan, senior managing director at Compass; and Sherry Tobak, senior vice president of Related Cos., who oversees sales at Hudson Yards.  

    The panelists discussed sales activity, property valuations, foreign investments and other factors influencing the market heading into 2023. 

    “If you look solely at the numbers and compare 2022 to 2021, it looks grim, but you have to give it context,” said Haggerty, who heads the regional multiple listing service that covers nearly a dozen counties in the greater New York area, including Long Island, Manhattan, and Westchester and Sullivan counties. “While the numbers are down about 30 percent, we have to focus on two things: We lost all seasonality to the market during the 2020/2021 years, when we had a rush of activity. That wasn’t sustainable. Also, buyers were taking a pause at the end of 2022 as interest rates were going up. It’s what we expected. Now, we’re seeing interest rates come down, more normalcy and a return to seasonality.” 

    Certainly, 2022 was a year of transition for the residential real estate industry here. Home sales on Long Island have seen year-over-year declines since the overheated pandemic market began to cool in the second half of 2021. There were 28,214 homes contracted for sale in Nassau and Suffolk counties in 2022, a nearly 21.5 percent drop from the 36,065 pending sales in 2021. 

    The panel weighed in on some of the 2022 statistics, economic factors, interest rates, inflation, and the shift from a buyer’s to seller’s market, offering predictions on property values and the return of foreign investors seeking properties in New York City. 

    “Foreign investors are coming back,” Tobak said. “I’m really excited about China opening up again – as luxury buyers, they are very savvy, very smart, they follow market trends and aren’t afraid of jumping into new situations, i.e., Hudson Yards. We’re also seeing Europeans, certainly Brits, and I met a couple from Australia who was buying here. This is New York, everyone wants to be here, everyone wants a piece of the action. I’m very bullish on the market for 2023.” 

    Haggerty asked the panel about “hidden gems” or neighborhoods they’re particularly bullish on in terms of value for 2023.  

    “Queens is such an overlooked borough. It’s closer to Manhattan, and there’s some really great housing stock,” said Stribling-Kivlan. “Queens is a launching pad for so many incredible people, ideas and cultures and we don’t give it enough credit.”  

    The webinar is part of the “Be Your Best” series created by HGAR and OneKey MLS, to help real estate brokers and agents navigate a changing landscape amid the pandemic. The event was moderated by Brian Tormey, president of TitleVest, a Manhattan-based provider of title insurance and related real estate services, which also sponsored the program. 

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    David Winzelberg

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  • These Charts Show How The Real Estate Boom Turned Into A Bust

    These Charts Show How The Real Estate Boom Turned Into A Bust

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    On June 2021 I wrote a post here titled “3 Reasons Why The Real Estate Boom Is Not A Bubble.” At the time, a lingering deficit of housing units was pushing up housing prices but the combination of low rates, healthy savings and strong income made it still quite affordable to buy a home. The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta agrees: According to a recent article, affordability was pretty high when the article came out. But oh my, how times have changed.

    The affordability index fell precipitously from those good times to the lowest value since before the Financial Crisis. According to the Atlanta Fed, the decline was (and still is) driven mainly by higher prices and much more expensive mortgages. These factors also affect homeowners who bought or refinanced their homes over the past few years at historically low rates: They are stuck, because moving to a new home will require in many cases much higher mortgage payments. This, in turn, contributes to the shortage of existing homes offered for sale.

    Both existing and new home sales slumped. National Association of Realtors data shows that existing home sales fell from a peak of 6.5MM annual units in early 2022 to about 4.1MM units, or about the same as during the worst point of the pandemic, and they are heading lower. It is similar to the decline in new home sales, which in July 2022 reached the lowest level since March 2016.

    Conditions are unlikely to change much, since mortgage rates will stay high as long as the Fed remains determined to keep interest rates high to fight inflation. This means that sales will slow even further unless there is a price adjustment. This is affecting the construction industry, which had cranked up production in response to higher prices but now finds it more difficult to sell their newly built homes.

    What makes it even worse for homebuilders is that, according to the Atlanta Fed data, a lot more is still under construction, adding to the pipeline of new homes coming to market.

    The growing housing glut is confirmed by other measures, such as the number of housing units in the U.S. as a percentage of population. That percentage hit a peak during the construction frenzy driven by the housing bubble of the mid-2000s, which took several years to adjust. But, when prices recovered and sales boomed, new construction kicked in and drove that percentage even higher.

    And this brings me back to the point I made earlier: With a lot of new inventory, even more coming out and affordability at a low point, home prices will have to adjust or sales will continue to fall. This may not necessarily be a serious problem for existing homeowners who can wait, but a big one for builders who, having tied up capital in inventory, will have to offer discounts to move their product. But, because of higher construction costs caused by the supply-chain crisis, their margins have shrunk and their ability to cut prices and still make a profit might be limited.

    Either way, this is not entirely unwelcome news for the Fed, intent as it is to lower prices, slow the economy down or, preferably it seems, both. A slowdown in construction activity and lower home prices would go a long way to achieve the outcomes it seeks. The first part is unfolding, as the number of permits for new residential construction is 29% below the recent peak. Notably, permits sank between 30% and 77% off a prior peak in 7 out of the last 8 recessions, which suggests that the slowdown in construction spending may get worse if the recession everyone expects actually materializes.

    When local factors are considered, national trends matter less

    It’s important to keep in mind that there are differences between the aggregate real estate numbers presented above and the realities on the ground, which are influenced by local conditions much more than by nationwide numbers.

    Take, for example, three counties in Florida (Manatee, Sarasota and Charlotte) just south of Tampa, on the Gulf of Mexico – which happens to be where I live and work.

    According to Realtor MLS data, the number of real estate listings here dropped rather steadily from the 28,000 or so active listings in the months leading to the 2008 Financial Crisis (when monthly sales were a paltry 1,100 units a month) to a low of just 2,000 active listings in March 2022 (shortly after sales had reached a red-hot volume of 4,000 units a month that depleted inventory). In recent months the number of active listings has recovered slightly and is once again larger than monthly sales, but the number of units listed for sale is still far lower than for most of the last 15 years.

    This area’s real estate transactions are influenced by tourism, retirement, and a migration into Florida from other states that picked up momentum with the trend towards remote work. In addition, the area tends to attract buyers of luxury homes who are less sensitive to price increases and don’t rely as much on mortgages.

    The point is that hyper-local conditions override nationwide numbers, so while the information I presented earlier is important to investors considering real estate investments through instruments such as VNQ
    VNQ
    (an ETF that invests in REITs) or REZ (an ETF with higher exposure to residential real estate), it may be of marginal importance for someone evaluating the sale or purchase of a specific piece of real estate. While current conditions seem particularly unfavorable at this time for large homebuilders with a national presence, those thinking about buying or selling a home in any given place will benefit more from consulting real estate agents, who usually have the best understanding of local conditions, rather than aggregate numbers.

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    Raul Elizalde, Contributor

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  • Slow December sales cap transition year for LI housing market | Long Island Business News

    Slow December sales cap transition year for LI housing market | Long Island Business News

    [ad_1]

    The Long Island housing market slogged through another disappointing month in December, capping off a year of transition for the residential real estate industry. 

    As had been the case for most of 2022, home sales slowed, and home prices continued to retreat again last month. 

    There were 1,583 Long Island homes contracted for sale in December, down 14 percent from the 1,846 pending sales of the previous month and a drop of 34.4 percent from the 2,414 homes that were contracted for sale in Dec. 2021, according to preliminary numbers from OneKey MLS. 

    The number of Long Island home sales in December was the lowest number of December home sales in the last nine years. 

    Home sales on Long Island have seen year-over-year declines since the overheated pandemic market began to cool in the second half of 2021. There were 28,214 homes contracted for sale in Nassau and Suffolk counties in 2022, a nearly 21.5 percent drop from the 36,065 pending sales in 2021. 

    The meteoric rise in Long Island home prices that was propelled by the pandemic-fueled buying frenzy has come back down to earth. The median price of closed home sales in Nassau last month was $652,500, down from $668,000 the previous month and the lowest median price since last March. 

    In Suffolk, the median price of closed home sales in December held steady at $545,000, the same as the previous month, and the lowest median price since April’s median of $540,000. 

    While prices have been sliding back, they remain higher than a year ago, if just barely. Nassau’s median price of closed home sales last month was just 1.2 percent higher than the $645,000 median recorded in Dec. 2021. Suffolk’s median price of closed home sales last month was 3.8 percent higher than the $525,000 median recorded in Dec. 2021. 

    While current mortgage rates are averaging about 6.5 percent for a 30-year fixed loan and nearly double what they were a year ago, they haven’t caused big drops in home prices because of the still-low inventory of homes for sale here. 

    There were 5,154 homes listed for sale with OneKey MLS—2,374 in Nassau and 2,780 in Suffolk—as of Thursday, which is down 14.4 percent from the 6,025 homes that were listed for sale at the end of November. But the current inventory is also 17.3 percent higher than the 4,394 homes that were listed for sale at the end of Dec. 2021. 

    In 2023, we expect a more normally paced market without the buying frenzy prompted by the pandemic and rock-bottom mortgage rates of the previous two years,” Deirdre O’Connell, CEO of Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty, said when asked about her outlook for the coming year. “With many homeowners locked into very low-rate mortgages, many are not in a rush to move, which is adding to the limited number of available homes on the market.” 

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    David Winzelberg

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  • U.S. new home sales rose in November by 5.8%

    U.S. new home sales rose in November by 5.8%

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    The numbers: U.S. new home sales rose 5.8% to a seasonally-adjusted rate of 640,000 in November, from a revised 605,000 in the prior month, the Commerce Department reported Friday.

    The November sales figure beat analyst estimates. Analysts polled by the Wall Street Journal had forecast new home sales to come in at 600,000 in November.

    The sales of new homes are below a peak of 1.04 million in August 2020.

    Year-over-year, new home sales are still down by 15.3%.

    New home sales rose a revised 8.2% to 605,000 in October, compared with the initial estimate of a 7.5% increase to 632,000. 

    The new home sales data are volatile month-on-month and are often revised. 

    Key details: The median sales price of a new home sold in November was $471,200, down from $484,700 in October.

    The supply of new homes for sale fell by 7.5% between October and November, equating to an 8.6-month supply. 

    Regionally, the West led the U.S. in the number of new homes sold, with new homes sold surging by 27.6%, followed by the Midwest. 

    Sales of new homes dropped in the Northeast and the South this November.

    Big picture: 7% mortgage rates didn’t put a damper on new home sales, as seen in today’s report.

    New home sales jumped in November, likely as buyers wanted to take advantage of incentives that builders are offering, from mortgage rate buydowns to price cuts.

    Builders have been gloomy almost all year, fretting about lower traffic.

    But with rates coming back down since, expect housing data to improve further.

    What are they saying? “I suspect that builders are much more motivated sellers (especially given the surge in financing costs) than current homeowners, who do not want to part with their 3% or lower mortgages,” Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont, wrote in a note. “This may explain why new home sales are rising while existing home sales plunge. ”

    But overall, sales are still weaker than usual: Stanley noted that combined existing and new home sales in November fell to the lowest level since 2011.

    Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.53%

    and the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.59%

    were down in early trading on Friday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.749%

    rose above 3.7%.

    Shares of builders, including D.R. Horton, Inc.
    DHI,
    -1.29%
    ,
    Lennar Corp
    LEN,
    -0.46%
    ,
    PulteGroup Inc.
    PHM,
    -0.52%
    ,
    and Toll Brothers Inc.
    TOL,
    -0.33%

    traded lower during morning trading.

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  • Ohio’s Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

    Ohio’s Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Intel’s announcement earlier this year of a $20 billion manufacturing operation bringing thousands of jobs to rural Ohio was greeted as an economic boon.

    But behind that enthusiasm lurked a pressing question.

    “Where are we putting everybody?” asked Melissa Humbert-Washington, vice president of programs and services at Homes for Families, which helps low-wage workers find housing in a region already suffering a major shortage.

    Intel says its initial two computer chip factories will employ 3,000 people when the operation is up and running in 2025. The project is also expected to employ 7,000 construction workers. And none of that includes the hundreds of additional jobs as Intel suppliers move in, along with the expected boom in the service sector.

    Such housing challenges are playing out across the country as companies increasingly come under fire for failing to consider the shelter needs of their new employees or the impact big developments will have on already tight housing markets.

    Experts agree that years of underbuilding dating to the Great Recession of 2008 has caused widespread housing shortages. Nationally, the country is short about 1 million homes, according to Rob Dietz, senior economist at the National Association of Home Builders. The National Apartment Association estimates a rental shortage of about 600,000 units.

    “We have underbuilt housing by millions of homes over the past 15 years,” said Dennis Shea, executive director of the J. Ronald Terwilliger Center for Housing Policy. “So when a big company comes into a community that is supply constrained, the demand that they’re going to inject … is going to affect home prices and rental prices because there’s more demand than supply.”

    For a big company’s impact on housing, look no farther than Intel’s own operations in Chandler, Arizona, which grew from a small agricultural city of about 30,000 in 1980 when the company built its first factory to a high-tech metropolis of 220,000 today. That was accompanied by tremendous housing growth, and today Chandler is running out of developable land, with nearly 95% of the area built out with residential, office, industrial and retail projects, according to the Greater Phoenix Economic Council.

    Housing is also more expensive in Chandler, with a median home sale price of $525,000 compared to $455,000 in greater Phoenix, and median rents of $2,027 compared to $1,950 in Phoenix.

    The challenge for areas like rural Ohio is that they don’t have local employees to build or staff a large project, said Mark Stapp, director of the Center for Real Estate Theory and Practice at Arizona State University. There’s neither the housing nor the infrastructure to accommodate the thousands of new arrivals, increasing housing prices and possibly forcing existing residents out.

    “It’s economic development. It’s going to employ people. But you are probably going to have to bring a lot of people into the area,” he said. And “those jobs require housing.”

    “If you don’t recognize that and don’t properly plan infrastructure, land use policies and manage that growth, it can be a big problem. The great opportunity turns into a big problem.”

    In central Ohio, the Intel site is rising on hundreds of acres of rural land once occupied by farm fields and modest homes where large business parks have also sprung up near major thoroughfares. The region has averaged about 8,200 building permits per year for both single-family and multi-unit buildings, even as job and population growth estimates predating the Intel project called for more than twice that, according to the Building Industry Association of Central Ohio.

    “We’re not building enough of anything,” said the group’s executive director Jon Melchi. Central Ohio, with about 2.4 million residents today, will grow to at least 3 million by 2050, the group said.

    The central Ohio shortage includes the “missing middle” of workforce housing, or homes up to $250,000, said Tre’ Giller, CEO and president of Metro Development, one of Ohio’s largest apartment developers. A recent Zillow search showed only about 570 listings for homes $250,000 or less in the area.

    The housing pressure is especially intense for low-wage workers. Central Ohio already has about 71,000 households considered “severely rent burdened” — families spending more than half their income on housing, said the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio. The region has only 34 affordable units available for every 100 low-rent households, it said.

    The problem is even more severe in Licking County, home to the future Intel plants, where more than one in five renters are considered severely rent burdened.

    Affordable housing is crucial for the low-wage workers who keep the economy running, from pre-school teachers to medical assistants, said COHIO executive director Amy Riegel. But housing also has to be viewed on a spectrum: Without enough higher-end properties to purchase, buyers will snap up rentals, which then shuts out workers of limited means.

    “Housing is definitely an ecosystem,” Riegel said. “If you add housing at one end, and don’t take care of the other end, it has an impact and a ripple effect through the whole system.”

    On the Nov. 8 ballot, Columbus voters approved a $200 million bond issue aimed at increasing the city’s affordable housing stock for homeowners earning less than $50,000 annually. “We simply do not have enough places for people to live,” Mayor Andrew Ginther said in announcing the issue in July.

    Janna Sharrett is grateful for her apartment in an affordable housing complex in suburban Columbus as the region braces for Intel’s arrival and its real estate impact. The 60-year-old customer service rep works from home and earns just $14.94 an hour. Her rent on the one-bedroom apartment she shares with her dog, Bella, and cat, Daisy, is $695.

    The $6.5 million, 28-unit building where Sharrett lives was developed by Homeport, a Columbus-based nonprofit that works to expand affordable housing. Sharrett moved in two years ago seeking relief from a $1,000 rent payment, and today isn’t sure what she’d do without it.

    She worries about the needs of people like herself as the region grows through projects such as Intel.

    “Rent is outrageous. Prices of homes are outrageous. And my income is not outrageous,” Sharrett said.

    Across the country, a growing number of companies are responding to housing concerns by rolling out ambitious plans for thousands of units of new housing — though efforts fall far short of actual needs.

    In 2021, Amazon launched its $2 billion Housing Equity Fund to create over 8,000 affordable homes across three regions where it operates: the Puget Sound in Washington state; Arlington, Virginia, and Nashville, Tennessee.

    In 2019, Apple said it would commit $2.5 billion toward easing California’s housing crisis, one of a number of initiatives by high tech companies. This month Walt Disney World picked a developer to construct affordable housing on 80 acres of its land in Orange County, Florida.

    Intel, too, looks forward to partnering with Ohio community leaders to prepare for the increased housing demand over the next few years, said Intel spokesperson Linda Qian, without providing details.

    Experts say it’s in Intel’s best interest to contribute toward alleviating the region’s housing shortage. Employers in greater Columbus already blame high worker turnover and reduced productivity on long commute times, according to a report by the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio.

    “Without the housing product it can easily stifle the workforce needs of Intel and others,” said Jamie Green, a Columbus-based planning consultant.

    As the Intel project unfolds, it highlights the challenges ahead, said Leah Evans, president and CEO of Homeport, which developed Sharrett’s affordable apartment complex.

    “This just brought to light that for every one job you create, you’ve got a commute and you’ve got a housing unit” need, Evans said. “You have to be thinking about all those things.”

    ———

    Michael Casey in Boston contributed to this report.

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  • Ohio’s Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

    Ohio’s Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Intel’s announcement earlier this year of a $20 billion manufacturing operation bringing thousands of jobs to rural Ohio was greeted as an economic boon.

    But behind that enthusiasm lurked a pressing question.

    “Where are we putting everybody?” asked Melissa Humbert-Washington, vice president of programs and services at Homes for Families, which helps low-wage workers find housing in a region already suffering a major shortage.

    Intel says its initial two computer chip factories will employ 3,000 people when the operation is up and running in 2025. The project is also expected to employ 7,000 construction workers. And none of that includes the hundreds of additional jobs as Intel suppliers move in, along with the expected boom in the service sector.

    Such housing challenges are playing out across the country as companies increasingly come under fire for failing to consider the shelter needs of their new employees or the impact big developments will have on already tight housing markets.

    Experts agree that years of underbuilding dating to the Great Recession of 2008 has caused widespread housing shortages. Nationally, the country is short about 1 million homes, according to Rob Dietz, senior economist at the National Association of Home Builders. The National Apartment Association estimates a rental shortage of about 600,000 units.

    “We have underbuilt housing by millions of homes over the past 15 years,” said Dennis Shea, executive director of the J. Ronald Terwilliger Center for Housing Policy. “So when a big company comes into a community that is supply constrained, the demand that they’re going to inject … is going to affect home prices and rental prices because there’s more demand than supply.”

    For a big company’s impact on housing, look no farther than Intel’s own operations in Chandler, Arizona, which grew from a small agricultural city of about 30,000 in 1980 when the company built its first factory to a high-tech metropolis of 220,000 today. That was accompanied by tremendous housing growth, and today Chandler is running out of developable land, with nearly 95% of the area built out with residential, office, industrial and retail projects, according to the Greater Phoenix Economic Council.

    Housing is also more expensive in Chandler, with a median home sale price of $525,000 compared to $455,000 in greater Phoenix, and median rents of $2,027 compared to $1,950 in Phoenix.

    The challenge for areas like rural Ohio is that they don’t have local employees to build or staff a large project, said Mark Stapp, director of the Center for Real Estate Theory and Practice at Arizona State University. There’s neither the housing nor the infrastructure to accommodate the thousands of new arrivals, increasing housing prices and possibly forcing existing residents out.

    “It’s economic development. It’s going to employ people. But you are probably going to have to bring a lot of people into the area,” he said. And “those jobs require housing.”

    “If you don’t recognize that and don’t properly plan infrastructure, land use policies and manage that growth, it can be a big problem. The great opportunity turns into a big problem.”

    In central Ohio, the Intel site is rising on hundreds of acres of rural land once occupied by farm fields and modest homes where large business parks have also sprung up near major thoroughfares. The region has averaged about 8,200 building permits per year for both single-family and multi-unit buildings, even as job and population growth estimates predating the Intel project called for more than twice that, according to the Building Industry Association of Central Ohio.

    “We’re not building enough of anything,” said the group’s executive director Jon Melchi. Central Ohio, with about 2.4 million residents today, will grow to at least 3 million by 2050, the group said.

    The central Ohio shortage includes the “missing middle” of workforce housing, or homes up to $250,000, said Tre’ Giller, CEO and president of Metro Development, one of Ohio’s largest apartment developers. A recent Zillow search showed only about 570 listings for homes $250,000 or less in the area.

    The housing pressure is especially intense for low-wage workers. Central Ohio already has about 71,000 households considered “severely rent burdened” — families spending more than half their income on housing, said the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio. The region has only 34 affordable units available for every 100 low-rent households, it said.

    The problem is even more severe in Licking County, home to the future Intel plants, where more than one in five renters are considered severely rent burdened.

    Affordable housing is crucial for the low-wage workers who keep the economy running, from pre-school teachers to medical assistants, said COHIO executive director Amy Riegel. But housing also has to be viewed on a spectrum: Without enough higher-end properties to purchase, buyers will snap up rentals, which then shuts out workers of limited means.

    “Housing is definitely an ecosystem,” Riegel said. “If you add housing at one end, and don’t take care of the other end, it has an impact and a ripple effect through the whole system.”

    On the Nov. 8 ballot, Columbus voters approved a $200 million bond issue aimed at increasing the city’s affordable housing stock for homeowners earning less than $50,000 annually. “We simply do not have enough places for people to live,” Mayor Andrew Ginther said in announcing the issue in July.

    Janna Sharrett is grateful for her apartment in an affordable housing complex in suburban Columbus as the region braces for Intel’s arrival and its real estate impact. The 60-year-old customer service rep works from home and earns just $14.94 an hour. Her rent on the one-bedroom apartment she shares with her dog, Bella, and cat, Daisy, is $695.

    The $6.5 million, 28-unit building where Sharrett lives was developed by Homeport, a Columbus-based nonprofit that works to expand affordable housing. Sharrett moved in two years ago seeking relief from a $1,000 rent payment, and today isn’t sure what she’d do without it.

    She worries about the needs of people like herself as the region grows through projects such as Intel.

    “Rent is outrageous. Prices of homes are outrageous. And my income is not outrageous,” Sharrett said.

    Across the country, a growing number of companies are responding to housing concerns by rolling out ambitious plans for thousands of units of new housing — though efforts fall far short of actual needs.

    In 2021, Amazon launched its $2 billion Housing Equity Fund to create over 8,000 affordable homes across three regions where it operates: the Puget Sound in Washington state; Arlington, Virginia, and Nashville, Tennessee.

    In 2019, Apple said it would commit $2.5 billion toward easing California’s housing crisis, one of a number of initiatives by high tech companies. This month Walt Disney World picked a developer to construct affordable housing on 80 acres of its land in Orange County, Florida.

    Intel, too, looks forward to partnering with Ohio community leaders to prepare for the increased housing demand over the next few years, said Intel spokesperson Linda Qian, without providing details.

    Experts say it’s in Intel’s best interest to contribute toward alleviating the region’s housing shortage. Employers in greater Columbus already blame high worker turnover and reduced productivity on long commute times, according to a report by the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio.

    “Without the housing product it can easily stifle the workforce needs of Intel and others,” said Jamie Green, a Columbus-based planning consultant.

    As the Intel project unfolds, it highlights the challenges ahead, said Leah Evans, president and CEO of Homeport, which developed Sharrett’s affordable apartment complex.

    “This just brought to light that for every one job you create, you’ve got a commute and you’ve got a housing unit” need, Evans said. “You have to be thinking about all those things.”

    ———

    Michael Casey in Boston contributed to this report.

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  • Ohio’s Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

    Ohio’s Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Intel’s announcement earlier this year of a $20 billion manufacturing operation bringing thousands of jobs to rural Ohio was greeted as an economic boon.

    But behind that enthusiasm lurked a pressing question.

    “Where are we putting everybody?” asked Melissa Humbert-Washington, vice president of programs and services at Homes for Families, which helps low-wage workers find housing in a region already suffering a major shortage.

    Intel says its initial two computer chip factories will employ 3,000 people when the operation is up and running in 2025. The project is also expected to employ 7,000 construction workers. And none of that includes the hundreds of additional jobs as Intel suppliers move in, along with the expected boom in the service sector.

    Such housing challenges are playing out across the country as companies increasingly come under fire for failing to consider the shelter needs of their new employees or the impact big developments will have on already tight housing markets.

    Experts agree that years of underbuilding dating to the Great Recession of 2008 has caused widespread housing shortages. Nationally, the country is short about 1 million homes, according to Rob Dietz, senior economist at the National Association of Home Builders. The National Apartment Association estimates a rental shortage of about 600,000 units.

    “We have underbuilt housing by millions of homes over the past 15 years,” said Dennis Shea, executive director of the J. Ronald Terwilliger Center for Housing Policy. “So when a big company comes into a community that is supply constrained, the demand that they’re going to inject … is going to affect home prices and rental prices because there’s more demand than supply.”

    For a big company’s impact on housing, look no farther than Intel’s own operations in Chandler, Arizona, which grew from a small agricultural city of about 30,000 in 1980 when the company built its first factory to a high-tech metropolis of 220,000 today. That was accompanied by tremendous housing growth, and today Chandler is running out of developable land, with nearly 95% of the area built out with residential, office, industrial and retail projects, according to the Greater Phoenix Economic Council.

    Housing is also more expensive in Chandler, with a median home sale price of $525,000 compared to $455,000 in greater Phoenix, and median rents of $2,027 compared to $1,950 in Phoenix.

    The challenge for areas like rural Ohio is that they don’t have local employees to build or staff a large project, said Mark Stapp, director of the Center for Real Estate Theory and Practice at Arizona State University. There’s neither the housing nor the infrastructure to accommodate the thousands of new arrivals, increasing housing prices and possibly forcing existing residents out.

    “It’s economic development. It’s going to employ people. But you are probably going to have to bring a lot of people into the area,” he said. And “those jobs require housing.”

    “If you don’t recognize that and don’t properly plan infrastructure, land use policies and manage that growth, it can be a big problem. The great opportunity turns into a big problem.”

    In central Ohio, the Intel site is rising on hundreds of acres of rural land once occupied by farm fields and modest homes where large business parks have also sprung up near major thoroughfares. The region has averaged about 8,200 building permits per year for both single-family and multi-unit buildings, even as job and population growth estimates predating the Intel project called for more than twice that, according to the Building Industry Association of Central Ohio.

    “We’re not building enough of anything,” said the group’s executive director Jon Melchi. Central Ohio, with about 2.4 million residents today, will grow to at least 3 million by 2050, the group said.

    The central Ohio shortage includes the “missing middle” of workforce housing, or homes up to $250,000, said Tre’ Giller, CEO and president of Metro Development, one of Ohio’s largest apartment developers. A recent Zillow search showed only about 570 listings for homes $250,000 or less in the area.

    The housing pressure is especially intense for low-wage workers. Central Ohio already has about 71,000 households considered “severely rent burdened” — families spending more than half their income on housing, said the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio. The region has only 34 affordable units available for every 100 low-rent households, it said.

    The problem is even more severe in Licking County, home to the future Intel plants, where more than one in five renters are considered severely rent burdened.

    Affordable housing is crucial for the low-wage workers who keep the economy running, from pre-school teachers to medical assistants, said COHIO executive director Amy Riegel. But housing also has to be viewed on a spectrum: Without enough higher-end properties to purchase, buyers will snap up rentals, which then shuts out workers of limited means.

    “Housing is definitely an ecosystem,” Riegel said. “If you add housing at one end, and don’t take care of the other end, it has an impact and a ripple effect through the whole system.”

    On the Nov. 8 ballot, Columbus voters approved a $200 million bond issue aimed at increasing the city’s affordable housing stock for homeowners earning less than $50,000 annually. “We simply do not have enough places for people to live,” Mayor Andrew Ginther said in announcing the issue in July.

    Janna Sharrett is grateful for her apartment in an affordable housing complex in suburban Columbus as the region braces for Intel’s arrival and its real estate impact. The 60-year-old customer service rep works from home and earns just $14.94 an hour. Her rent on the one-bedroom apartment she shares with her dog, Bella, and cat, Daisy, is $695.

    The $6.5 million, 28-unit building where Sharrett lives was developed by Homeport, a Columbus-based nonprofit that works to expand affordable housing. Sharrett moved in two years ago seeking relief from a $1,000 rent payment, and today isn’t sure what she’d do without it.

    She worries about the needs of people like herself as the region grows through projects such as Intel.

    “Rent is outrageous. Prices of homes are outrageous. And my income is not outrageous,” Sharrett said.

    Across the country, a growing number of companies are responding to housing concerns by rolling out ambitious plans for thousands of units of new housing — though efforts fall far short of actual needs.

    In 2021, Amazon launched its $2 billion Housing Equity Fund to create over 8,000 affordable homes across three regions where it operates: the Puget Sound in Washington state; Arlington, Virginia, and Nashville, Tennessee.

    In 2019, Apple said it would commit $2.5 billion toward easing California’s housing crisis, one of a number of initiatives by high tech companies. This month Walt Disney World picked a developer to construct affordable housing on 80 acres of its land in Orange County, Florida.

    Intel, too, looks forward to partnering with Ohio community leaders to prepare for the increased housing demand over the next few years, said Intel spokesperson Linda Qian, without providing details.

    Experts say it’s in Intel’s best interest to contribute toward alleviating the region’s housing shortage. Employers in greater Columbus already blame high worker turnover and reduced productivity on long commute times, according to a report by the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio.

    “Without the housing product it can easily stifle the workforce needs of Intel and others,” said Jamie Green, a Columbus-based planning consultant.

    As the Intel project unfolds, it highlights the challenges ahead, said Leah Evans, president and CEO of Homeport, which developed Sharrett’s affordable apartment complex.

    “This just brought to light that for every one job you create, you’ve got a commute and you’ve got a housing unit” need, Evans said. “You have to be thinking about all those things.”

    ———

    Michael Casey in Boston contributed to this report.

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  • 2 Hawaiian men guilty of hate crime in white man’s beating

    2 Hawaiian men guilty of hate crime in white man’s beating

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    HONOLULU — A jury on Thursday found two Native Hawaiian men guilty of a hate crime for the 2014 beating of a white man who was fixing up a house he purchased in their remote Maui neighborhood.

    U.S. District Judge J. Michael Seabright ordered Kaulana Alo-Kaonohi and Levi Aki Jr. detained pending sentencing scheduled for March 2, and marshals moved to handcuff the two men after the verdict was announced in the afternoon.

    Family members and supporters wept in the courtroom and called out to the men: “I love you,” and “Be good.” “God bless you daddy,” said Alo-Kaonohi’s son Kahue, 3.

    In an unusual move, the U.S. Department of Justice sought to prosecute Alo-Kaonohi and Aki and secured a federal grand jury indictment in December 2020 charging each with a hate crime count punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

    Prosecutors alleged during the trial in U.S. District Court in Honolulu that Alo-Kaonohi and Aki were motivated by Christopher Kunzelman’s race when they punched, kicked and used a shovel to beat him in Kahakuloa village. Kunzelman was left with injuries including a concussion, two broken ribs and head and abdominal trauma, prosecutors said.

    Alo-Kaonohi previously pleaded no contest to felony assault in state court and was sentenced to probation, while Aki pleaded no contest to terroristic threatening and was sentenced to probation and nearly 200 days in jail. The federal trial was held separately, to determine if they were guilty of a hate crime. It’s unclear why it took so long for U.S. prosecutors to pursue hate crime charges.

    Local attorneys say they’ve never heard of the federal government prosecuting Native Hawaiians for hate crimes before this case.

    Lawyers for Alo-Kaonohi and Aki did not deny the assault but said it was not a hate crime. It was not race that sparked the attack, they said, but Kunzelman’s entitled and disrespectful attitude.

    The men were upset that Kunzelman cut locks to village gates, their attorneys said. Kunzelman said he did so because residents were locking him in and out. He testified that he wanted to provide the village with better locks and distribute keys to residents.

    Kunzelman testified that while Alo-Kaonohi and Aki beat him, they told him no white people would ever live in Kahakuloa village. However, he acknowledged that’s not heard in video recorded during the attack.

    Kunzelman said he decided to take two pistols to Maui after hearing that a contractor he hired to do mold remediation had been assaulted when he showed up and after his realtor said the close-knit community of Native Hawaiians had a problem with white people.

    He also installed cameras on his vehicle, which were on during the attack. The vehicle was parked under the house and recorded images of what was happening downstairs, including Aki pacing with a shovel on his shoulder. The video only captured audio from the assault, which took place upstairs.

    Lawyers for Alo-Kaonohi an Aki told jurors the video shows that they didn’t use any racial slurs.

    “Haole,” a Hawaiian word with meanings that include foreign and white person, was central to the case, highlighting multicultural Hawaii’s nuanced and complicated relationship with race.

    At one point Aki is heard saying, “You’s a haole, eh,” using a Hawaiian word that can mean white person. Defense attorneys said he didn’t use the word in a derogatory way.

    “It’s not a hate crime to assault somebody and in the course of it use the word ‘haole,’” court-appointed attorney Lynn Panagakos said during her opening statement. She noted that Aki is part-Hawaiian and part-haole.

    “’Haole’ has multiple meanings depending on the context,” she said. “It’s an accepted word.”

    Megan Kau, a Native Hawaiian attorney not involved in the case, said it depends on the tone and manner in which the word is used.

    “These Native Hawaiians who live in a secluded, very traditional community who use the term ‘haole’ to describe people that are not from Hawaii — that’s the term that they use,” she said. “We all very often use the term ‘haole.’ It’s not derogatory unless you use it in a derogatory sense.”

    Wiping away tears outside the courthouse following the verdict, Alo-Kaonohi’s father, Chico Kaonohi, said bias was not a motivation behind the attack and “’Haole’ is not a racial word.”

    “Where we come from, we’re not racial people,” Chico Kaonohi, said. “It wasn’t about race.”

    Attorneys for both defendants declined to comment Thursday. Prosecutors did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

    Kunzelman testified that he and his wife decided to move to Maui from Scottsdale, Arizona, after she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. He said his wife loved the island.

    He said that a Hawaiian woman visited him in his dreams and told him to buy the dilapidated oceanfront house, which he and his wife purchased sight-unseen for $175,000 after coming across a listing for it online.

    Kunzelman and his family never got to live in the home, he testified. They now reside in Puerto Rico.

    He sat in the courtroom watching as the verdict was announced. He could not immediately be reached for comment afterward.

    ———

    This story has been corrected to reflect that the defendant’s son is 3 years old, not 4.

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  • Man testifies about Hawaii beating he says was hate crime

    Man testifies about Hawaii beating he says was hate crime

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    HONOLULU — A white man who says he was a victim of a hate crime when two Native Hawaiian men assaulted him while he was fixing up a home he purchased in their remote Maui village testified Wednesday that his attackers were racially motivated, even though he conceded that no racist comments can be heard in video taken during the 2014 beating.

    Christopher Kunzelman said the men beat him and told him no white people would ever live in Kahakuloa village — a comment that’s not heard in the footage. Kaulana Alo-Kaonohi and Levi Aki Jr. are on trial for one federal count each of a hate crime. Their defense attorneys don’t deny the assault, but say their actions were motivated by Kunzelman’s entitled and disrespectful attitude — not his race.

    Alo-Kaonohi and Aki punched, kicked and used a shovel to beat Kunzelman, leaving him with injuries including a concussion, two broken ribs and head and abdominal trauma, U.S. prosecutors said.

    Under questioning by Salina Kanai, a federal defender for Alo-Kaonohi, Kunzelman acknowledged that the men were enraged about Kunzelman earlier cutting locks on village gates but made no mention of his race.

    “He’s not talking about your skin color, he’s not talking about your race,” Kanai said of Alo-Kaonohi, who is heard in the video calling him “brah” and “buddy.”

    Kanai said Alo-Kaonohi, during an expletive-laced tirade about the locks, didn’t call Kunzelman a “haole,” a Hawaiian word that can mean white person.

    Kunzelman responded, “Correct, not yet.”

    More than five minutes into the incident, which was recorded by cameras on Kunzelman’s vehicle parked under the house, there was only one utterance of anything racial, Kanai said.

    “You’s a haole, eh,” Aki said in the recording.

    The video shows what is happening downstairs, including Aki pacing with a shovel on his shoulder. The video captures the sound coming from upstairs, where Kunzelman said he was beaten, but not any images.

    What’s not audible in the video is the men calling him “haole” in a derogatory way and threatening to shoot him with his own gun, even though they were shouting, Kunzelman said.

    Kunzelman testified that he and his wife decided to move to Maui from Scottsdale, Arizona, after she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. He said his wife loved the island.

    A Hawaiian woman visited him in his dreams and told him to buy the dilapidated oceanfront house, he said, which he and his wife purchased sight unseen for $175,000 after coming across a listing for it online.

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