LuxuryBlurb

Archive for September, 2010

BIG CITY FEDERAL TAX CREDIT ESSENTIAL!

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

The Obama administration is about to define ALL single persons earning $ 200,000.00 or more or ALL couples earning $ 250,000.00 or more rich: It is time we stand up to this sheer stupidity.

Yes, these incomes would definitely qualify you as rich in Oklahoma City or a small town in Vermont, but it is VERY far from rich in a city such as New York City. It may indeed be necessary to raise taxes on the rich, but it is even more important, if we are to be American, to be fair. A BIG CITY FEDERAL TAX CREDIT is long overdue. Big cities drain national resources significantly less than smaller cities. They are much more efficient. but they are much more expensive to live in as well. Housing costs are often double, triple or even qudruple that of smaller cities and towns. Food, education, pretty much everything is more expensive. Yet Washington is incapable of recognizing this fact? Thats a national disgrace!

New York City residents should stand up for their rights now and demand a re-definition of the term ‘rich’ to take into account city-by-city cost of living immediately.

“A New York couple who earns $ 250,000.00 a year can afford an apartment that costs about $ 750,000.00 if they were to obtain a mortgage,” says Leonard Steinberg, managing director of Prudential Douglas Elliman and leader of the LUXURYLOFT team. “Where in New York City can you find a RICH PERSON’S apartment for $ 750,000.00? In Manhattan especially, earning $ 250k per year does not make you rich by any standards. Washington is completely out of touch with the real world.”

The ‘Bush tax cuts’ are set to expire at the end of 2010. Regardless of the  increase in the tax rates, this is what we suggest:

1)  Introduce a BIG CITY Federal Tax Credit based on the city you reside in calculated by the differential in cost of living. IE: Those earning $ 250k in Tupelo, Mississipi should not pay the same tax rate as those living in Manhattan.

2) Identify the large tax avoiders, those with access to the most ‘sophisticated’ accountants and lawyers who often pay taxes at half the rate the rest of us do, while earning ten times more.

3) Why ZERO estate taxes for just one year: revoke this stupid law that amounts to a windfall for a lucky few (at the expense of all of us) and introduce lower estate taxes for all…..or use the lost estate tax revenue of 2010 to pay down the national debt!

4) Raise the retirement age to adjust for the fact that we are living longer.

5) Make everyone pay SOME Federal taxes…even if its a little. No-one should get a free ride. We should all contribute. That way more people would vote too.

6) Cut the waste. Introduce more tech-based efficiencies to government. Fire corrupt government employees + jail them with double time.

7) Corporations and private equity are sitting on $2.5 TRILLION dollars in cash, but they are not hiring. Provide tax credits for hiring. Every individual employed, becomes a contributor to the economy by not only consuming and spending, but also reducing their need to tap into federal funds (our tax dollars) to foot their unemployment bill. Its cheaper than keeping them un-employed…..by far.

8) Re-evaluate illegal immigrant reform now:  Charge all illegal immigrants a one-time fee ($ 250?) to become legal. 11 million x $ 250 can help to pay down the deficit. 11 million consumers, paying taxes (if they are collected!) will help fuel the economy. Make learning English a pre-requisite for citizenship. 1 common language unites a country and eliminates the cost of bi-lingual government (it costs BILLIONS every year!).

9) Don’t focus on raising tax rates! Focus on collecting the taxes owed. Our constitution is quite clear about us all being created equal, no?

EATALY: MANHATTANS NEW FOOD COURT

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Yesterday I visited EATALY for the first time, the new food emporium of Mario Batali…..what an experience! The line at the front door was the reminiscent of Studio 54: who would be chic enough to get past that velvet rope from a line stretched around onto 5th Avenue? I had to negotiate hard, explaining a friend was inside seated at a table waiting for me. That explanation was not good enough. I put on my svelte sunglasses and pretended to be uber-chic….that helped.

Inside was a truly cavernous melange of incredible displays of every imaginable food type….fresh fish, vegetables, ice cream, books, wine….EVERYTHING ITALIAN. The presentation is beautiful, although a bit chaotic with the drones of people everywhere. For anyone on vacation its a dream come true. For anyone wanting a gastronomic escape on a rainy day, its amazing. Real Estate wise it fuels the neighborhood around Madison Square Park to the point where I would estimate values will rise 5%….easily. The service is super-slow, almost bad, but this is to be expected at the very beginning. they had better work on it hard before they lose repeat business though.

Leonard Steinberg, managing director of Prudential Douglas Elliman and author of the LUXURYLETTER says: “Overall it’s a winner!”

WHAT’S REPORTED HAS ALREADY HAPPENED

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

In this morning’s Wall Street Journal, an interesting article talks about the timeliness of real estate data. We have been talking about this for years….

“We have repeatedly cautioned anyone to use real estate quarterly reports to get the best gauge of what is really happening in the markets right now,” says leonard Steinberg of Prudential Douglas Elliman, and leader of the LUXURYLOFT team. “We issue a monthly report that reports on SIGNED CONTRACTS as well as closed sales to get a more balanced perspective of what is selling for what RIGHT NOW. Closed sales often went to contract many months and sometimes even years before closing. Pricing is a reflection of what the market is will ing to bear to-day, not that of the past.”

When reading Tuesday’s report on home prices from the S&P/Case-Shiller index, use caution.

The Case-Shiller index uses data that is several months old—it’s a three month moving average, which means that Tuesday’s report shows home sales for April, May and June.  That’s when the home buyer tax credits were largely still in effect.

So it’s not surprising that Tuesday’s reading showed that home sales gained by a non-seasonally adjusted 1% in the three month period ending in June from the period ending in May.

July’s weak sales figures—existing and new home sales were both at very low levels—means that sellers are going to be reducing prices if they want to sell homes. Real-estate agents across the country are describing a rare standoff in housing markets, where buyers and sellers aren’t seeing eye to eye on price.

So when you read of a ‘double dip recession’ chances are we are already in the dip and by the time the press reports it as actual, chances are we will be on the way out…