Asking price 10 months later? $100 million.
The reason for the lack of movement on the price tag isn't a stubborn seller or the lack of draw. Homes in the highest echelon of the real estate market-everywhere-simply aren't selling fast. The key to unloading a $100 million dollar property these days? Patience.
"The uber-luxury high-end market is not anywhere near where it was three, four, five years ago," said Brendon DeSimone, real estate expert with listings site Zillow.com.
Dropping oil prices, fluctuating stock markets, and weak currencies have led to slowdowns in the world's priciest markets. International buyers are still a force in the American real estate market, in part because high-net-worth individuals are looking for safer places than the stock market to park their cash. But it's a little riskier to invest in a property that's off the beaten luxury path, no matter how storied its pedigree. Sycamore Valley Ranch, as Neverland is now called, has three major hurdles to overcome: location, location, location.
The property- purchased from a financially ailing Jackson in 2008 with a $23.5 million note from Thomas Barrack Jr's Colony Capital - is located in Los Olivos, a town of around 1,100 residents located about 130 miles northeast of LA. That's pretty far from the proliferation of the highest-end homes. "Most of the homes in these price ranges are waterfront, or with ocean views, or they're in the cities," said DeSimone.
According to Zillow, Neverland is asking nearly 200 times the median home value of $548,500 in Santa Barbara County. Wayne S.Natale, real estate broker for nearby Village Properties and a 30-year veteran of real estate in the Santa Ynez Valley, said there are few truly high-end properties in his domain. (He doesn't represent Neverland but has toured the property many times.) Only a couple of homes above $4 million sell each year. There's almost nothing to compare Neverland to - no comps to settle the stomachs of nervous buyers. Just as the singer was inimitable, so is his property.
"There's never been a $100 million sale in the Santa Ynez Valley," Natale said. "If it was in Aspen, it would be a $100 million property, or maybe if it was in upstate New York . But here, that asking price has a lot of blue sky in it."
Take this $125 million, 12-bed, 13-bath home located an hour from Neverland, right in Montecito, with those ocean views and almost 30,000 square feet. It has been on the market since 2014, repped by the same folks who took on Neverland. There hasn't been a price cut.
In truth, not much is selling for those prices, anywhere. The most expensive home sold on Zillow in 2015 went for $46.3 million. That was Kenny Rogers's old place, with 23,988 square feet in Bel Air.
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