Bay Shore Sale

Many years ago, there was a time when selling a Bay Shore condominium should have been easy. At that time of apparent ease, it was, in fact, difficult to sell a unit at Williams Bay’s Bay Shore due to a very expensive special assessment of sorts that was for a while in the works, and then soon on the books. Bay Shore the condominium association was constructed in the early 1990s around a restaurant. That restaurant was a bit loud, and it was a bit annoying, and when the restaurant was put up for sale along with the piers that went with it, the condominium owners coughed up roughly $50k each to purchase this in-betwixt annoyance. Then the owners tore down the restaurant and put in a newer, bigger pool, and completed the transformation with an outdoor kitchen and lush, mature landscaping. The result of this $50k horse pill was pleasing, the process of swallowing said pill was not.

At the time of the $50k expenditure, several owners weren’t pleased. This is an understatement. And as they were displeased, I sold a few units in that development around that time to new buyers who liked the idea of the improvements, even if they too disliked the $50k expense. When units were sold, they were essentially sold for the purchase price, which was still reasonable, but also with the understanding that when that $50k assessment came due, it would be the responsibility of the new buyer. When units sold around that time, the market saw the sales price, but the market didn’t necessarily see that the sales price was in effect that price plus $50k. It was a bit complicated.

In 2003 I sold a unit there to a nice buyer who paid $250k for a one bedroom unit directly on the lakefront. If you’re not familiar with Bay Shore, the development has eight truly prime units that are immediately adjacent to the lakefront. These units consist of four two bedroom units and four one bedroom units. In a development where every unit has a view, these fortunate eight are prime. This one bedroom that I sold was one of the prime units, and it sold for that $250k but ended up being $250k + $50k. That owner enjoyed the property for the past 8 years, and yesterday closed on it for $275k.

The loan on that property was in trouble, as a sheriff’s sale was scheduled to take place this fall. That sale obviously won’t be necessary now, as the seller got out just in time. The sale was neither a win for the buyer nor the seller, though it could be successfully argued that the seller was the one who indeed won. Avoiding foreclosure should be considered a win in any and all circumstances. The price paid was in line with the market, and leaves the only other active unit at Bay Shore today my two bedroom that I just listed for $445k. The two bedroom units here come with an available slip, lake view, and private townhouse style entrance. It’s a great unit in a lively association, and if you’re looking for economical lakefront ownership, this is about as economical as both the purchase and the ownership get. (taxes and dues are super low here).

That wasn’t the only sale yesterday that was important to our vacation home market. A vacant lot closed in Geneva National yesterday for $10,000. I didn’t forget to add a zero. A buyer just paid ten grand for a vacant lot in Geneva National. This is significant because it isn’t 2001 anymore. The owner of that parcel purchased it in 1991 from the developing partners at GN. At the time, buyers were whipped into a frenzy and paid prices that made little sense from a broad market perspective, but pay they did. The buyer turned seller purchased that lot for $110,000 in 1991. He then sold that lot 20 years later for $10k. If you figure he probably had roughly $44k in fixed costs over that tenure between dues and taxes, he didn’t just lose $100k, he lost $144k. And then consider on the sale end he paid some closing costs that probably totaled $1500 or more, and he really lost around $145k. To purchase a property for $110k and end up losing $144k on that property is nearly an impossible feat. Thanks Geneva National! (FYI- these numbers are speculative, as I have no idea the exact structure of this deal and the ownership expenses over the last 20 years.)

While the Bay Shore sale doesn’t have much bearing on the market, as it was normal and expected, the Geneva National lot sale is worrisome. Will other sellers take note and further drive prices down? If a seller wants out, how else to attract a buyer but with a rock bottom price? If Geneva National vacant lots slide to 2002 levels, consider me a buyer. If they continue to stall, let’s watch it over the winter to see who else succumbs to a vacant land market suffering from a severe lack of liquidity.

About the Author

I'm David Curry. I write this blog to educate and entertain those who subscribe to the theory that Lake Geneva, Wisconsin is indeed the center of the real estate universe. When I started selling real estate 27 years ago I did so of a desire to one day dominate the activity in the Lake Geneva vacation home market. With over $800,000,000 in sales since January of 2010, that goal is within reach. If I can help you with your Lake Geneva real estate needs, please consider me at your service. Thanks for reading.

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Bay Shore Sale

Well then, that was quite the weekend. While the general recipe was equal doses of wind and heat, mixed in with a giant scoop of humanity and a heavy handed dash of boat traffic, there were moments of calm in that holiday storm. I found one such moment on Monday morning- if only for a few minutes before the wind pushed me towards the relief of a sturdy pier. Another moment on Sunday evening- a more enduring moment, though still fleeting- when the waters relaxed and most of the boats returned to their moorings. That was a nice evening on the water. The rest of the weekend? It was indeed a mash up of wind and waves and swimming and boats and people. This will make Fridays and Mondays spent at the lake so much the better.

What will happen now is simple. The next two weekends at the lake will be owned by those who have the time, but they will not remind anyone of the throng that is Memorial Day weekend in the Midwest. Those who are inconsiderate enough of others summer have planned weddings and graduations and birthday parties and the sorts of things that occur during the first two weekends in June. All of these things are annoying. I’d miss my own graduation for an afternoon spent on the water. I didn’t have to miss my own wedding to do the same- I was married in the proper front lawn of a lakefront estate. This is how you effectively plan an event while keeping the lake as the centerpiece. To those able to enjoy the next two weekends at the lake, I assure you they will be nothing like the baptism by fire that many endured over the weekend now past.

But this is just the commentary on the weekend and there is meaningful commentary owed to a sale from Friday. There was a sale at Bay Shore in Williams Bay. I never know whether to write BayShore like that or like this (Bay Shore) or sometimes, if I’m feeling strange, I’ll write it like this (Bayshore). Either way, they’re all right, and they all point to the blue/gray condominiums in Williams Bay nearest Edgewater Park. I used to sell a whole bunch of these units, back when lakefront condominiums traded with ease. That was quite a long while ago.

The most recent sale, one to a buyer whom I was pleased to represent, closed for $330k on Friday. The property was listed at for far less, so the sale in the MLS will boggle some of the simpler minds out there. The reality of the purchase was that the buyer had wanted to be in Bay Shore for years, eons perhaps, and this sale be it at $280k, $290k, or the actual sales price of $330k, was where he wanted to see his family play out their weekends. This was a sale driven by motivation, and by the understanding that sometimes to wait on the sidelines for a lifetime is not a prudent move. Scratch that- waiting forever is never, ever a wise move.

So the buyer gathered his motivation and closed for a very reasonable price. The unit is prime, just the second in from the lake, with a pleasantly oversized deck overlooking both the pool and the lake. This is a nice perch to spend those nights that fall between Friday afternoon and Monday morning. The sale, combined with a couple of nice sales in Geneva Towers this year, and a sale that I have pending at Eastbank in Lake Geneva, will breath more life into a lakefront condo market that has been suffocating for at least three full, long, tiring years.

Will these recent sales propel the lakefront condo market back into relevance? Doubtful. The importance of the sales- any and all of them- is that they set benchmarks for value. It’s scary to be the first buyer in several years to buy in any particular complex. This is true both here at the lake and there where you’re at. A sale in a condominium gives comfort to those who follow, and send a clear signal to the current market that value can be found at the number that just printed. No one wants to be the first guy to pay a price, but plenty of people find comfort in following a pricing pattern that can only start once someone takes that very important first step.

To this buyer, I’m grateful. It’s exciting to see buyers who have wanted something for so terribly long to finally capture what has been eluding them. Weekends spent near the water are the reward, and what a lasting reward that is. Take a deep breath, it’s going to be a long summer.

About the Author

I'm David Curry. I write this blog to educate and entertain those who subscribe to the theory that Lake Geneva, Wisconsin is indeed the center of the real estate universe. When I started selling real estate 27 years ago I did so of a desire to one day dominate the activity in the Lake Geneva vacation home market. With over $800,000,000 in sales since January of 2010, that goal is within reach. If I can help you with your Lake Geneva real estate needs, please consider me at your service. Thanks for reading.

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