• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

$100 mln Florida mansion sale "positive sign": Trump

MIAMI
Fri Jul 18, 2008 1:29am EDT
Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at an Aberdeenshire Council inquiry into the plans for his golf course resort in Aberdeen, northeast Scotland June 10, 2008. Trump said on Thursday that things may be looking up for the battered U.S. real estate market after he managed to sell a Palm Beach mansion this week for nearly $100 million. REUTERS/David Moir

MIAMI (Reuters) - Real estate mogul Donald Trump said on Thursday that things may be looking up for the battered U.S. real estate market after he managed to sell a Palm Beach mansion this week for nearly $100 million.

U.S.  |  People  |  Housing Market  |  Russia

Trump snapped up the oceanfront five-acre (2 hectare) property at a bankruptcy auction in 2004 for $41 million. The deed lists the sale price he got four years later as $95 million, said Robert Brody, a West Palm Beach lawyer representing the buyer.

"It's perhaps a very positive sign," Trump said of the sale in an interview with CNBC. "It's a sign that maybe things are getting better."

The U.S. housing market has gone from boom to bust in areas like Miami and Las Vegas, where speculation and lax lending standards combined with other factors to cause home prices to double or more between 2000 and 2005.

But Trump said high-end pockets of the market like Palm Beach continue to hold up nicely.

"Palm Beach is an amazing place. Not so long ago a house was sold for $82 million, another house was sold for $70 million. So Palm Beach is a very unique place," he said.

He said he knew "very little" about the buyer but media reports have identified him as Russian fertilizer billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev.

Trump said it was a bit disappointing, perhaps, that the Palm Beach property hadn't gone to an American buyer.

But he said most potential U.S. bidders on the property were personal friends or acquaintances of his who would never give him the pleasure of more than doubling the return on a four-year-old investment.

"The ones that can really afford it, I know them all. And, you know, they just say: 'You know, Donald, I want to buy it, and it doesn't matter what we pay, but I cannot give you that much pleasure,'" he said.

(Reporting by Tom Brown, Editing by Michael Christie, Toni Reinhold)



More from Reuters

Photo

Democrats reach deal on health bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democratic healthcare negotiators said they agreed on Tuesday to replace a government-run insurance option with a scaled-back non-profit plan and would seek cost estimates on the deal.

A pedestrian walks in lower Manhattan in New York, April 16, 2007.  REUTERS/Eric Thayer
Analysis:

The boomer meltdown

The number of U.S. workers in their prime savings years peaks in 2010, affecting a key ratio that has impacted equities for 40 years. If history repeats itself, stocks are set for a funk.  Full Article 

  Traders work on the main floor of the BM&F Bovespa stock exchange market in Sao Paulo October 10, 2008.REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker

Betting on emerging markets

There's still an upside in large-cap U.S. stocks, but BlackRock's Bob Doll says emerging markets have two things the developed world does not.  Full Article