Billionaires’ Row penthouse goes for a hefty $72M
The full-floor penthouse at 220 Central Park South sold in an off-market transaction that marks one of Manhattan’s biggest deals of the year. Continue reading
The full-floor penthouse at 220 Central Park South sold in an off-market transaction that marks one of Manhattan’s biggest deals of the year. Continue reading
The unidentified buyer of units on the 71st and 72nd floors of the Residences at the St. Regis Chicago inked the deal for $20.56 million, a far cry from Chicago’s priciest transaction of all time. Continue reading
One week after the record sale of businesswoman and philanthropist Adrienne Arsht’s 4-acre waterfront Coconut Grove estate, hedge funder Ken Griffin has emerged as the buyer. Continue reading
The deal on the Upper East Side units at 4 East 66th Street, which were never publicly listed, included a penthouse and a second apartment on a lower floor, according to records. Continue reading
The sale of fashion mogul Serge Azria’s 7-acre property in Malibu, California, for $177 million, has set a new record in the golden state. The buyer was venture capitalist Marc Andreessen. Continue reading
Palm Beach, Florida, luxury real estate had a banner year, nabbing half of the most expensive sales of the year, but a New York City deal claimed the top spot. Continue reading
Despite cities taking a back seat to vacation markets in 2021, major transactions made headlines across New York, Miami and Los Angeles. Continue reading
Joe Tsai, who cofounded the Chinese shopping behemoth Alibaba alongside Jack Ma, made the United States’ most expensive real estate sale so far. Continue reading
David Friedman, co-founder of WealthQuotient, talks through the recent $238 million Central Park South Penthouse purchase by hedge fund magnate and founder of Citadel, Ken Griffin, and what we can learn about ultra-high-net-worth individuals. Continue reading
Billionaire Ken Griffin just cemented the most expensive real estate purchase in the U.S. — a luxurious New York penthouse for $238 million. Continue reading