Tag: luxury

  • Washington DC gets ‘Trump Bump’ in luxury home market

    Washington DC gets ‘Trump Bump’ in luxury home market

    The Washington, D.C.-area has been enjoying a “Trump Bump” in its luxury home market. 

    That so-called “Trump Bump” started around November, when the nation’s capital saw a major increase in demand for luxury homes worth at least $5 million, and has continued into the new year, according to The Agency DC managing partner Nurit Coombe.  

    “Usually, houses above $5 million in November, for example, a year ago, there were eight sales or so,” she told FOX Business in an interview this week. “Between November, December, we had 20 sales above $5 million, a huge jump, and a lot of cash buyers.”  

    WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 19: The U.S. Capitol is shown at sunrise the day before President-elect Donald Trump’s 2nd term inauguration January 19, 2025 in Washington, DC. U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect Sen. JD Vance (R-OH) (Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “That’s a lot of sales,” Coombe noted, because the D.C. luxury market “doesn’t have that much inventory.”

    BOZEMAN, MONTANA HOME TO A BOOMING REAL ESTATE MARKET

    There are less than 30 single-family homes above $5 million – and even less in the ultra-luxury category – on the market in the D.C. area, according to The Agency DC managing partner. She said several luxury homes that had been up for sale for a long time quickly went under contract in November. 

    More than 60 luxury homes, generally considered those above the $5 million-mark, have sold in the D.C. market since the November election, according to The Agency DC.   

    “The market right now in DC is very, very strong, very hot, especially in the luxury market, for sure, because as you go up to the top of the price, you don’t have as many buyers, but we actually have more than usual, much more than usual,” Coombe told FOX Business. 

    Trump’s administration has been a big contributor to the D.C.-area luxury market’s recent surge.

    “The administration is a very wealthy administration, and they’re all going to be moving to the area to work from here. You’ve seen in the prior administration, it was not as wealthy, much less wealthy administration people who moved in, and some did not move in really full-time … So here you see a complete shift where we move in the whole family, we’re going to be here full-time, and very wealthy people are moving into the area, so there’s a lot of demand,” she said. 

    However, they aren’t the only ones providing fuel.

    “It’s also the big companies, the attorneys, they’re moving as well. There are people that are more aligned with the new administration, so a lot of that is happening,” Coombe added. “CEOs of companies, their support staff, the attorneys, a lot of consultants for big companies.” 

    The skyline of Washington, DC, including the US Capitol building, Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial and National Mall, is seen from the air, January 29, 2010. AFP PHOTO / Saul LOEB (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

    The skyline of Washington, DC, including the US Capitol building, Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial and National Mall, is seen from the air, January 29, 2010. AFP PHOTO / Saul LOEB (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images) (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Kalorama, Foxhall, Georgetown and Kent are among some of the neighborhoods in the nation’s capital benefiting from the “Trump Bump.” 

    Some recent sales include a $25 million transaction in Foxhall and a $10.5 million deal in Georgetown, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    Demand in the D.C. luxury market has gone up 18% year-over year, according to Coombe. 

    She also said parts of the broader D.C., Maryland and Virginia area, known as the DMV, have “definitely” seen more luxury demand in recent months as well, such as neighborhoods in Bethesda, North Bethesda and McLean.

    Aside from luxury homes, townhouses and condos have been in high-demand.

    THESE WERE THE MOST EXPENSIVE HOMES SOLD IN 2024, ACCORDING TO REDFIN

    The “government employee situation” is also making the D.C.-area real estate market more dynamic, according to Coombe. 

    Trump issued an order to bring federal workers back into the office full-time in late January. His administration has offered buyouts to many federal workers to leave their jobs or start doing in-person work, Fox News Digital reported. 

    Donald Trump

    DETROIT, MICHIGAN – AUGUST 26: Republican presidential nominee, former U.S. President Donald Trump during the National Guard Association of the United States’ 146th General Conference & Exhibition at Huntington Place Convention Center on Augu (Emily Elconin/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “This is an interesting shift to watch, because when you’re looking at government employees, it’s not necessarily the upper echelon, it’s not necessarily the high luxury, it’s the more mid,” Coombe said. “There’s a lot of people who took the incentive the government offered to leave the government and when you see that, a lot of them are not staying in the area.”

    Meanwhile, others are moving back to the area because they have to work in the office full-time again, she said. 

    It “depends on the policies” whether the D.C. market’s “Trump Bump” will continue, according to Coombe. 

    “Everybody’s watching what’s going to happen with the government employees, what’s going to happen with the international tax that we have, what’s going to happen in the stock market and obviously the mortgage,” she posited. “I think the lenders are sitting tight and watching.” 

    The nationwide 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 6.87% on average the week of Feb. 13, according to Freddie Mac. That marked a 0.02 percentage-point decline from the prior week. 

    BENTONVILLE, AR IS GROWING RAPIDLY, WHICH HAS FUELED A HOT REAL ESTATE MARKET

    She said that homebuyers in the D.C. area have become accustomed to the current level of rates and that the rates have not really affected D.C.’s luxury market in particular, noting more than 60% of buyers in that category since November have paid “all cash” or “heavy cash.” 

    D.C. had 5 sales of ultra-luxury homes worth at least $10 million in 2024, according to a recent Compass report. Those sales amounted to $67.85 million combined.

    In January, homes in the D.C. and Montgomery County real estate market sold for a median of $552,500, according to the Greater Capital Area Association of Realtors. 

     

  • Illegal aliens pose with luxury loot swiped from famed QB’s home: police

    Illegal aliens pose with luxury loot swiped from famed QB’s home: police

    A recent indictment against three Chilean migrants accused of carrying out a substantial heist at Joe Burrow’s house in December, includes photos of the alleged thieves posing with the Bengals quarterback’s luxury possessions.

    Investigators claim about $300,000 worth of items were stolen from Burrow’s Ohio home on Dec. 9, including his “JB9” and “#9” chains — completely studded in diamonds.

    Photos show the men wearing Burrow’s luxury watches and glasses, and posing with his stolen Luis Vuitton luggage.

    Another photo shows possessions laid out on a table, including a large stack of cash.

    NEW JERSEY MAN ARRESTED IN FENCING OPERATION ALLEGEDLY HAS LINKS TO JOE BURROW BURGLARY

    Jordan Francisco Quiroga Sanchez, 22, Bastian Alejandro Orellana Morales, 23, and Sergio Andres Ortega Cabello, 38, all of Chile, are charged in the burglary of Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s home in December.

    This comes after four Chilean migrants were pulled over during a traffic stop the other week. But one of the men is not facing federal charges. 

    Jordan Francisco Quiroga Sanchez, 22, Bastian Alejandro Orellana Morales, 23, and Sergio Andres Ortega Cabello, 38, all of Chile, were nabbed by Ohio State Patrol after authorities tracked them in multiple states following the burglary, according to court documents.

    Items stollen from Joe Burrow's home

    Luxury items swiped from Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s home in December.

    Phone analysis shows Cabello allegedly deleted photographs of the stolen items and the back of Burrow’s home, falsifying records in a federal investigation, according to documents.

    The men, who police say were in the country illegally, had tools for break-ins at the time of their arrest, along with a Cincinnati Bengals hat and Louisiana State University shirt believed to be stolen from Burrow’s home.

    Olivia Ponton smiling

    Olivia Ponton allegedly reported the break-in to police. (TheStewartofNY/FilmMagic)

    According to charging documents, police responded to a burglary at the quarterback’s home just before 8:15 p.m. on Dec. 9 after Sports Illustrated swimsuit model Olivia Ponton allegedly reported ransacked rooms and a broken window.

    At the time of the alleged crime, Burrow was away playing in an NFL game in Dallas, according to documents. It is believed the burglary happened between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.

    A federal grand jury in Cincinnati charged the three men, believed to be operating as part of a South American Theft Group, with transporting stolen goods interstate and falsifying records in a federal investigation, according to court records.

    ELITE MIGRANT CRIME RING TARGETING MICHIGAN HOMEOWNERS ON SPRING BREAK: SHERIFF

    The FBI said theft groups have been a “major concern” in the Cincinnati area.

    “We owe it to the victims, whether they are or are not professional athletes, to follow the evidence into these alleged criminal networks and hold the law-breakers accountable,” U.S. Attorney Kenneth L. Parker wrote in a statement. Today is a day that law enforcement scored and spiked the ball.”

    Joe Burrow talks to reporters

    Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow (9) speaks during a news conference after an NFL football game against the Cleveland Browns, Sunday, Dec. 22, 2024, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/Jeff Dean)

    Interstate transportation of stolen property is a federal crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison, according to authorities. Falsification of records in a federal investigation carries a potential penalty of up to 20 years in prison.

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    The three men were previously charged locally in relation to the burglary, and the state charges remain pending.

  • Barron Trump business partner clarifies future of luxury real estate venture

    Barron Trump business partner clarifies future of luxury real estate venture

    A luxury real estate venture that Barron Trump, the youngest son of President Donald Trump, was part of will not be relaunched, one of his partners in the project said. 

    The New York Post initially reported that the younger Trump planned to launch Trump, Fulcher & Roxburgh Capital Inc. with two business partners, Carter Fulcher, and Cameron Roxburgh, his former high school classmate.

    The company was incorporated in the state of Wyoming on July 15, 2024, according to business filings reviewed by FOX Business. The filings show the company was then dissolved shortly after the election on Nov. 14, 2024.

    “As of now, the company will not be relaunched,” Roxburgh told FOX Business. 

    SEE IT: BUSINESS LEADERS AT TRUMP’S INAUGURATION

    Barron Trump, son of President Donald Trump, appears during a campaign event at Trump National Doral Golf Club in Miami on July 9, 2024. (Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The company was reportedly planning to primarily focus on high-end real estate projects, including golf courses and properties in Utah, Arizona and Idaho.

    The venture was listed in Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, as its principal address, according to business records.

    Roxburgh previously told Newsweek that the venture was briefly paused to avoid election-related media attention. However, when FOX Business reached Roxburgh for comment, he said the company will not be relaunched. 

    PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP, VICE PRESIDENT JD VANCE OFFICIALLY SWORN INTO OFFICE

    Trump building

    The Trump Building at 40 Wall Street in the Financial District of New York is seen on Feb. 22, 2024. (Getty Images / Fox News)

    Fulcher, a luxury real estate expert whose family runs a prominent real estate firm in Idaho, was the third partner in the venture. Fulcher is also the cousin of U.S. Rep. Russ Fulcher, an Idaho Republican who was not involved in the venture, a spokesperson for his office told FOX Business. 

    FOX Business has reached out to Carter Fulcher for comment. 

    President Trump followed in his father’s footsteps when he took over his residential real estate company in 1971, which came before he launched multiple Trump luxury high-rise buildings, hotels and casinos and solidified the Trump brand.

    Trump hotel outside view

    Construction work on the Trump International Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., continues as the hotel prepares to open to the public on Sept. 12, 2016. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call / Fox News)

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    Days before the younger Trump incorporated his venture, his half-brother, Eric Trump, also incorporated ET Talks LLC.