citygirl said:Again - I did point out a little bit about the market reality of Manhattan which is different from anywhere else in the US. The vast majority of buildings require that the buyer have 40-50% of the asking price up front (20/25% down payment and another 20/25% in liquid assets) in order to be approved by a co-op board. So yes, you're not running into a high range of default and foreclosure.
And people - while the prices have dropped in Manhattan since 2007 (although they have been on the rise again for the last 6 months)- the AVERAGE PRICE for an apt is $1.4 million (down from a high of 1.7 million). So yeah, it's not exactly a buyer's paradise
Regardless of the 50% needed up front to be in a Co-Op apartment building, I am still sticking to my prediction. People, including New Yorker's in Manhattan live well outside their means. Sooner or later, when there is no credit left to tap into, the dominoes will fall.
Taking the average of $1.4 million, that would mean buyers would have a $1 million mortgage, which is a sizeable payment to make every month.
I also wonder if those liquid assets that where shown at time of approval need to be verified once a buyer moves in?