If you thought Irvine was expensive...

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/tiny_apartment





Tiny London apartment on sale for $335K









<p> By RAPHAEL G. SATTER, Associated Press Writer <em class="timedate">Mon Jan 22, 6:12 PM ET</em> </p>



<p> LONDON - Location, location, location. Almost anywhere else, the tiny dilapidated studio wouldn't attract much more than mice. But this is London and the 77-square-foot former storage room — slightly bigger than a prison cell and without electricity — is going for $335,000.





The closet-sized space in the exclusive Knightsbridge neighborhood may be only "about the size of a ship's galley, said real estate agent Andrew Scott, who's handling the sale. "But it's permanently anchored to one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the world."</p>

<p>At more than $4,340 a square foot, the mortgage buys a spot within walking distance of tony stores like Harrods and London's iconic Hyde Park. Originally conceived as a maid's room, the apartment at 18 Cadogan Place hasn't been used for years and is littered with trash bags and crumbling paint.





A coffin-sized shower is en suite, and storage is provided by a shallow closet and 10-inch-deep shelves cut into the wall. Two hot plates and a small sink make up the kitchen. Two dirty windows allow light to filter into the basement room, and the fire escape could conceivably double as a shared patio.</p>

<p>With no electricity or heating, Scott said it would cost an additional $59,000 to make the room habitable.</p>

<p>"It is an investment," he said, as he stretched his arms the width of the room, laying his palms flat on opposite sides of the wall.</p>

<p>The sale of this dark, mildewy room illustrates the astronomical rise in property values across London, which in the past year has seen average residential property prices increase 22.4 percent, to about $703,000, according to figures released Monday by Rightmove, which tracks the British property market.</p>

<p> Prices in London's most desirable neighborhoods have grown even faster, with average house prices in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea — where Cadogan Place is located — rising 61.8 percent over the past year to a jaw-dropping $2.2 million.</p>

<p>Ultra high-end property prices in London are the most expensive in the world, with some recent sales hitting $5,900 per square foot — making the Cadogan Place studio a bargain by comparison, according to research published last year by CB Richard Ellis Group Inc.</p>

<p>Similar properties in New York can go for about $5,300 per square foot, while those in Hong Kong sell at around $3,950 per square foot.</p>

<p>Scott said he already had three offers on the property, which might go to auction. Size, he added, is in the "eye of the beholder."</p>

<p>"If you thought of this as the cabin on a boat, you'd say, 'It's pretty spacious,' " Scott said.</p>

<p> </p>


 
<p>In 1635, a rare Semper Augustus tulip bulb sold for 6,000 florins in the Netherlands (the average yearly income at the time was 150 florins).</p>

<p>In the late 1980's prime properties in Tokyo's Ginza shopping district were selling for $100,000+ per square foot.</p>

<p>At it's IPO in February 2000, shares of Pets.com traded at $11 and the company raised more than $80 million.</p>

<p>Funny how these things only seem ridiculous in hindsight, isn't it?</p>
 
Another article today:


http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-fi-foreclose24jan24,0,4412832.story?coll=la-home-headlines





More Californians at risk of losing homes


By David Streitfeld, Times Staff Writer


January 24, 2007





The number of Californians defaulting on their mortgage loans is rising rapidly, according to figures released Tuesday, providing striking evidence that more people are at risk of losing their homes.





Default notices jumped 145% in the last three months of 2006, accelerating a trend that began in late 2005 as home sales started to cool.





It was the largest number of default notices in any three-month period since 1998.





Analysts said the increase was not worrisome — yet. But if the number continues to escalate, it could drag down home values in certain communities, they warned.





So far, this isn't alarming," said John Karevoll, chief analyst at DataQuick Information Systems, which compiled the data. But if default notices "keep going up at this rate, it could get nasty fast," he added.





Home markets that are most vulnerable include the Inland Empire and the Central Valley, both of which drew throngs of first-time buyers even as the housing boom was ending.





Such homeowners are the most at risk of losing their homes because they have relatively little equity in their properties, making it harder to refinance their mortgages.





Default notices are the initial step in the foreclosure process. In the fourth quarter of last year, lenders issued such notices to 37,273 borrowers across the state, warning them that they were at risk of foreclosure, compared with 15,196 during the same period a year earlier, DataQuick said.





Not every notice of default leads to a foreclosure, when a property is seized and sold to pay the mortgage. But foreclosures also are on the rise. There were 6,078 in the last quarter of 2006, up from 874 a year earlier.



 
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