Inman

What’s your top prediction for 2022? Readers’ hot takes

Pulse is a recurring column where we ask for readers’ takes on varying topics in a weekly survey and report back with our findings.

We know it’s early, but we’re already thinking about next year and how it’s going to shape the industry. After all, the past two years have so fundamentally changed both our personal and work lives, can anyone blame us for wondering what 2022 will bring?

We asked readers last week to share their top predictions for 2022. Here’s what they see in their crystal balls:

I also think that the foreign and national investors in New York are going to keep coming in as travel becomes easier (barring another surge in the virus), and that’s going to continue to fuel the market, especially the luxury market and the condo market.

What I’ve seen immediately after the borders were opened to many countries on Nov. 8 is that people who are savvy realize that foreigners are coming back, so it’s making domestic buyers move more quickly and make offers more quickly, thinking that they’ll have a limited amount of time to get a certain deal on something, they think that prices are going to go up. I’ve heard it as well, I’ve spoken to buyers I’m showing apartments to, who have said that they do think that foreign buyers are coming back, so I think that they are looking to get something done before a potential big surge in pricing happens.

I just sold an apartment at The Plaza, and both of the buyers who were pursuing it were conscious of foreign buyers coming back and wanted to make it happen quickly. We made a deal and went to contract with someone who’s not a foreign buyer, but who wanted to make a deal quickly.

Especially because The Plaza is a building that’s popular with foreign buyers, historically, there’s been a lot of foreign buyers. Because of its infamy and because it’s a condo, it’s in a central location and just because of the name of The Plaza, it draws a lot of foreign buyers. One of the [domestic] buyers was a real estate person, the other a finance person. They knew foreign buyers could end up costing them if they don’t move quickly.

I was talking to a buyer the other day about how active Sutton Place is right now. I think the neighborhood is having a revival of some sort and this will likely continue into 2022. Sutton Place has always been active, but it’s really having a moment with sales activity and amongst a diverse group of people, like young professionals, families and retirees. My buyer has viewed properties across the Upper East Side, but at the end of the day, she can get more space (and an amazing view of the east river or a quiet block of townhomes) for her money in Sutton Place.

I have recently had a first-time buyer slow down their search until spring and one suspended their search altogether while they focus on other aspects of their lives. I am working to encourage them to remain searching actively, but not sure they will listen. Another client who has been told by her landlord that he will not renew her lease in June, faces an even bigger challenge as rental prices rise and inventory tightens. The luxury market will remain strong in 2022.

What’s your take? Feel free to share your top predictions in the comments section below.