Issue 86 – The Great Reset: New Yorkers have reconsidered what their life looks like in a post-pandemic world.

The result is a desire to upsize in Brooklyn.

Three years ago, New Yorkers shopping for real estate prized convenience. “How close is it to the office?” was an oft-heard question, and understandably so.

But after a historic global pandemic, things have changed. Suddenly, the office has moved into our homes and the need to be in Manhattan isn’t what it once was. As New Yorkers increasingly work from home, we have seen things like greenspaces, home configurations that double as workspaces, and an overall sense of community become bigger factors for people looking to move. I call it ‘the great reset’ – individuals have reconsidered what their life looks like in this new world, what matters to them most and what they value in a home.

So what does that mean in real estate terms? Well, there is more of a “let’s upsize” mentality in the air right now. People need the possibility of separation – be it separation from their significant others while they are working from home, or separation from our nannies while we’re working from home. “While our nanny is here, let’s get a bigger space.. some outdoor space would also be nice…” – it feels like searching for space is the new post-pandemic version of looking for convenience.

It’s not just indoor space. Now the space outside our four walls is a key consideration, too. Since people are commuting less, they have found themselves spending more of their leisure time locally. That’s a change for those who didn’t even know [in the pre-pandemic era] what their neighborhoods looked like during the daytime. As our neighborhoods become more than mere places to lay our heads down, the character and quality of the local community has become essential. You know it’s an interesting time in New York when people want to actually greet their neighbors on a first name basis. An important question people are asking now is: “what does my neighborhood feel like when I walk out my front door?”

Taking all this into account, where does one go when seeking the above but desperate to avoid the suburbs? The answer is Brooklyn! The days when it lacked the amenities of Manhattan are long past. You now have access to premium grocery stores like Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s, endless choices of boutique fitness studios, including favorites like Rumble and Equinox, and some of New York’s top-rated Michelin star restaurants.

Life in the “outer-borough” is calmer and more connected, and you can snag a townhome for the price of a West Village 3 bedroom. It’s an option more and more people are considering, and neighborhoods like Carroll Gardens and Cobble Hill are prime examples. Compare the median $1,264 price per square foot of Carroll Gardens or $1,296 of Cobble Hill to the staggering $2,171 of the West Village, and suddenly you see why this is an attractive play for Manhattan residents looking to upsize. The search zone has expanded for many families due to the work from home and hybrid models. These areas that were scarcely on the radar before are now becoming sought-after destinations.

These neighborhoods have the space, the wealth, great schools, and charm. People are recognizing this, and we’re seeing the market reflect that. The median asking rent IN BROOKLYN? just hit $2,800 – 16.7% higher than just a year ago. Can you blame them? You can be in SoHo in 15 minutes or Midtown in 30 minutes, but you don’t have to deal with living in either. None of the hustle and bustle, agitations, and tourists that complicate Manhattan has. And all this without the exorbitant price per square foot. Want to move yet?

Issue 122 – Foreign Demand Re-Emerges as Luxury Buyers Underwrite Political Risk

As we head into summer, we are seeing a very notable resurgence of international buyers entering the New York market — and frankly, in a way we haven’t seen in years.

Let’s explore why.

Historically, global capital gravitates toward stability, discretion, and internationally recognized assets. In New York City, that typically translates to park-facing residences, trophy properties, and globally recognizable “name-brand” buildings. These include Aman, Four Seasons, Related developments, and legacy Park Avenue or Central Park South product with strong service infrastructure and long-term value preservation.

Right now, buyers are looking for quality, security, and assets that feel insulated in uncertain times. NYC, despite all the headlines, remains a strong, long-term store of value internationally.

When there is instability abroad, New York City benefits. It offers legal transparency, deep liquidity, world-class education, finance, culture, and healthcare — and a real estate market that, while imperfect, is still well understood around the world.

What’s different now is that buyers are not necessarily purchasing because they think New York is “hot.” They are buying because New York is established. That is an important distinction: the capital is less speculative and more preservation-oriented. For many international families, a New York apartment is part lifestyle asset, part hedge, part legacy planning.

The headlines about wealthy buyers fleeing New York City are often too simplistic. Yes, some buyers have moved capital to Florida, Texas, or other lower-tax markets. But that does not mean New York has lost its global relevance.

The newly announced pied-a-terre/second-home tax in New York targets luxury second homes valued at $5 million or more, with the goal of creating an annual surcharge on non-primary residences. This proposal is certainly something international buyers are paying attention to, though it remains to be seen if this will impact continued investment. Rather than eliminating foreign demand, the tax likely makes buyers more selective, becoming part of the broader cost-of-ownership analysis alongside the mansion tax, carrying costs, and currency exposure. It may create pause around marginal purchases, but for a trophy asset, it won’t stop the buyer. It simply raises the bar for what feels worth owning.

The concern is less the dollar amount itself and more the perception. International buyers are highly sensitive to whether a market feels welcoming, predictable, and stable. Policy often moves perception before it moves fundamentals.

We’re consistently seeing foreign buyers generally gravitate toward turnkey product. The appetite for renovation or operational complexity is far lower than it once was. Buyers want ease, service, security, and a property that immediately translates internationally, both from a branding and lifestyle standpoint. For these global buyers, New York remains one of the few carrying both emotional and financial prestige.

Enter: Japanese buyers. The Real Deal recently reported a massive resurgence in Japanese capital, providing a lifeline to aging multifamily walk-ups. “Japan-linked firms have acquired at least $2.1 billion worth of New York City property since the start of 2024, according to analysis by Okada & Company and TRD Data,” the piece details.

This surge is driven by a stark yield gap: With low interest rates at home, Japanese buyers can borrow cheaply in Japan to acquire higher-yielding assets, a strategy supercharged by domestic tax incentives for multi-family purchases.

We are also seeing diversifying residential demand from Australian, Brazilian, Taiwanese, and Western Europe buyers. Eastern European activity is still highly selective compared to prior cycles, but international demand as a whole has undeniably re-entered the market. The usual suspects — such as Central Park South, Tribeca, Billionaire’s Row, and select Downtown properties — remain the primary anchors.

Target price points for these foreign investors vary by country of origin and the purchase’s purpose, with the most active international demand falling into clear segments:.

The serious lifestyle buyer ($3M to $7M): Typically targets a strong two or three bedrooms in a premier building, prioritizing service, security, and an easy lock-and-leave lifestyle.

The wealth-preservation buyer ($7M to $15M+): Focuses heavily on blue-chip locations — Central Park, Fifth Avenue, Park Avenue, Tribeca, Billionaires’ Row — or globally recognized branded residences.

The ultra-high-net-worth buyer: Prioritizes the asset above any price point, focusing on scarcity, pedigree, privacy, views, service, and long-term relevance. They are not asking, “Is this affordable?” They are asking, “Will this matter 10 years from now?”

Today’s foreign buyer is much more disciplined. They want turnkey and certainty. They want building quality, service quality, financial stability, and a residence that translates globally.

The biggest shift is that foreign buyers are not chasing the market — they are underwriting it. They are asking better questions: What are the monthly carrying costs? Who is the resale audience? How strong is the building financially? How liquid is this asset? Does this location hold value in multiple cycles?

Overall, cultural nuance matters more than ever. Buyers are underwriting not just the apartment, but NYC itself.

Five years ago, there was still more appetite for optionality — buyers were more willing to consider renovation, new development premiums, or speculative upside.

On the Japanese side specifically, what I’m noticing is a renewed comfort level with NYC real estate as a legacy asset class. The buyers I’m seeing tend to be highly analytical, long-term focused, and extremely quality-driven. They’re not chasing hype — they’re buying permanence.

The Brazilian and Australian buyers we’re seeing tend to be incredibly lifestyle-oriented while still highly aware of long-term value, whereas many Western European buyers continue to prioritize pedigree buildings, architecture, privacy, and stability. Taiwanese buyers similarly appear very focused on security, quality, and established global positioning.

For foreign investors, New York City still represents something very specific: legal stability, cultural prestige, liquidity, access, education, healthcare, and global identity. The buyers I’m seeing are not ignoring the headlines. They are simply looking past them when the asset is strong enough.

New York is no longer a market where everything trades easily. It is a precision market. But for the right property — the right building, the right view, the right service, the right location — foreign buyers are still very much there.

The common denominator across almost all of them is that they are buying selectively — but decisively — when the product feels globally relevant.

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