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By SANETTE TANAKA There is a new breed of quick-change artist on the real-estate front: luxury ippers who focus on high-end

properties.

Million-Dollar Flips
Popular before the housing bust, house ipping where a property is bought, renovated and sold quickly to make a protis seeing a comeback nationwide. Rising prices and tight inventory are driving more investors to the upper end of the market. Flips of homes priced at $1 million or more shot up 35% in 2012 compared with 2011, according to market researcher RealtyTrac. "Investors have actually run out of inventory on the low end of ips, and now they're moving to the higher end," says Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac. The million-dollar homes are "the untapped market." Some new players are behind the uptick: foreign buyers, institutional investors and professionals who have made money in other industries.

Source: RealtyTrac

"In this market now with these numbers, everyone thinks they're going to catch the next wave," says Zar Zanganeh, a real-estate broker in Las Vegas, adding that he gets three times as many requests for homes to ip now than a year ago. Patricia Delinois, president and chief executive ofcer of Century 21 Premier Elite Realty in Miami, facilitated a ip for a 6,255-square-foot "complete xer-upper," she says. The property was purchased in January 2012 for $1.2 million by an investment group led by an American and backed by Venezuelan, Brazilian, Colombian, Russian and French investors. They renovated the kitchen and bathrooms, installed top-of-the-line appliances and lighting, and decked it out with luxury nishes. The renovations cost almost $1 million, she says. Now it is on the market for $2.98 million. In Washington, D.C., Beth Hughes, a real-estate agent with DCRE Residential who nds homes for ippers, last summer found a 2,000-square-foot house in Columbia Heights for Jordan Ghrist, president of Level One Development LLC. He bought the four-bedroom, 3-bathroom house for $461,500 and gave it a "total gut job," he says. Mr. Ghrist has a $2 million fund so he can pay with cash. The house went under contract for $805,000 about a month ago after a mere three days on the market. The sale is expected to close this weeknetting about 28% in prot, he estimates. Flipping high-end homes can be particularly challenging. Selling a luxury property can take longer than a midprice home, and renovation costs can be steep, because high-end buyers expect to be wowed. Plenty of ippers have lost money. RealtyTrac data show that in Naples-Marco Island, Fla., for example, ippers who purchased homes for $1 million or more lost 14% of their investment when the property sold within six months. Ideally, the purchase, renovation and sale should occur within six months to maximize prots, says Bruce Bartlett, managing partner at Sequoia Real Estate Partners, a private-equity rm in Los Angeles. "These aren't paint-and-lipstick jobs. Basically, you have to re-envision the entire house," says Mr. Bartlett, who ips single-family and multifamily homes with a team of partners, including Eric Sussman, senior lecturer at the Ziman Center for Real Estate at the University of California, Los Angeles. Mr. Bartlett recently bought a 1,850-square-foot modern house in Los Angeles's Hollywood Hills for $690,000. He then spent $50,000, mostly on cosmetic changes, adding walnut ooring and railings, maple cabinets and granite counters in the kitchen, a new wet bar, and fresh paint. He expects the house to close this week for $888,888at a 20% prot. When buying a home to ip, Mr. Bartlett says he rst considers the foundation, roof, electrical system, plumbing, and heating and air-conditioning. "That's where you really drop all your money when you x a house," he adds.

For materials, Mr. Bartlett shops at outlet and wholesale stores. He looks for sales and asks for deals. In the Hollywood Hills house, he wanted a white-patterned decorative tile, but designername versions were too pricey, from $40 to $77 per square foot. Instead, he opted for a generic wall tile that cost $3.82 a square foot. For the wet bar, he chose a generic black tile that cost $1.99 per square foot and a porcelain tile in sea-foam green instead of glass. For items that people see, such as appliances and xtures, he'll buy brand names. Sometimes he buys in bulk. "Costco had really, really great Hansgrohe bathroom faucets for $70 each. I took 20," he says. "I don't know yet where I'll use it, but I know I'll use it. And when a buyer comes into the house, he'll see Hansgrohe." High-end ips are particularly gaining traction in the markets hardest hit during the downturn. Investors could scoop up homes at big discounts in areas that now have some of the highest home-appreciation rates. Some metro areas have seen more than a sevenfold increase in milliondollar ips over the past year, although million-dollar homes make up less than 1% of all ips, according to RealtyTrac data. The million-plus ips offer more room to make a prot. The high demand means investors can take bigger risks in rehabbingand get higher prices. In Atlanta, property appraiser Dan Fries says the $1 million homes he appraises are typically valued for $250,000 more after they are ipped, depending on whether the changes improve the house functionally or are purely cosmetic. Sometimes, he says, investors earn back ve times the amount they put into renovations. In recent months, high-end ippers have had to be creative in nding homes. Mr. Bartlett, the Los Angeles ipper, bought a house in Rancho Palos Verdes after a friend told him the owner had died, and his family, who had inherited the property, lived out of town. The property had been vacant for six months and had water damage. He called the family's real-estate agent, who sold the property to him for $825,000. He plans to spend $200,000 to create an open oor plan, recongure the master bedroom, redo the landscaping and put in air-conditioning. Normally, he doesn't take on houses that need a complete overhaul, but he expects this one to sell for $1.4 million, a 37% prot, he says. Lloyd Segal, a house ipper himself and author of "Flipping Houses," a guide to buying and xing houses, nds homes through bankruptcy courts, probate courts, courthouse auctions and people in his network, to whom he'll pay an assignment fee. Sometimes he just drives around Los Angeles to scout properties. That's how he found one of his latest homes, which he bought for $2.85 million. "I was late for a date and driving like a maniac through Hollywood. I see this little sign that said 'For Sale' and a phone number," says Mr. Segal, adding that he immediately pulled off the side of the road to call. "I was late for the date. You can see my priorities. Don't tell anyone that."

Additional Photos of SREP homes in the article:

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