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Activity Tapers Off for Luxury Manhattan Homes

The Big Apple saw transactions slow for the second week in a row

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Buyers signed 21 contracts for home prices at $4 million or more in the week ending Sunday.

Visions of America / Getty Images
Buyers signed 21 contracts for home prices at $4 million or more in the week ending Sunday.
Visions of America / Getty Images

Following a very lively spring for Manhattan luxury homes, transactions have tapered off over the past two weeks, according to a weekly report by Olshan Realty.

Last week marked "the second week in a row of falling sales," wrote Donna Olshan, president of Olshan Realty, in the report released Monday. "Is this a harbinger of a typically sluggish summer ahead? Stay tuned."

More:Read More About the Luxury Manhattan Market

In total, buyers signed 21 contracts for home prices at $4 million or more in the week ending Sunday, a slight decline from the week prior and a marked shift after a strong spring.  

The smaller number of sales meant a lower total transaction volume: $177.68 million.

The priciest unit to go into contract last week was a Plaza Hotel penthouse at the center of a notorious lawsuit a decade ago, following the historic hotel’s conversion to condominiums. The Russian buyer who’d planned to spend roughly $50 million on a two-penthouse spread claimed the apartments were not as luxurious as he was led to believe.

But the penthouse was just fine for its latest moneyed buyer. The four-bedroom, five-and-a-half bathroom apartment went into contract asking $39.75 million, reduced from $59 million when it first hit the market in 2013.

London developer Christian Candy is the seller of the unit, which pales in comparison to some of his biggest sales. Mr. Candy sold a unit in Monte Carlo in 2010 for $312 million and a London penthouse that same year in $221 million, according to the report.

The No. 2 contract was for a two-unit spread at 21 East 12th St., asking $23.5 million. The home has 6,617 square feet of living space  and nearly the same amount of space in private garden—one of the largest private gardens in Manhattan, according to the report.