OT: Cuonzo's House Sells 500k Over Asking

2,933 Views | 15 Replies | Last: 8 yr ago by GMP
socaliganbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
http://www.socketsite.com/archives/2017/04/former-cal-hoops-coach-scores-on-fast-break-sale-of-east-bay-home.html
510Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
That is one sweet house!
NYCGOBEARS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
COL in the Bay Area may be high, but so is the ROI on high end real estate. Sonny and Cuonzo both did well in their short stints in Berkeley.
82gradDLSdad
How long do you want to ignore this user?
He did a lot of remodeling given that he moved on so quickly. It's not like he bought a fixer upper
PtownBear1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
NYCGOBEARS;842834139 said:

COL in the Bay Area may be high, but so is the ROI on high end real estate. Sonny and Cuonzo both did well in their short stints in Berkeley.


Article says Guonzo purchased for 2.5m and sold for 3m after some remodeling. Once you factor in commission and other sale costs, he didn't make much, if anything.
GMP
How long do you want to ignore this user?
SFBear2012;842834156 said:

Article says Guonzo purchased for 2.5m and sold for 3m after some remodeling. Once you factor in commission and other sale costs, he didn't make much, if anything.


He lived in a great house for 3 years at no cost. How is that not making anything? It's free housing!
GB54
How long do you want to ignore this user?
We've finally found a reason to attract coaches to Cal- make a killing on real estate and move to the Midwest
ColoradoBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
grandmastapoop;842834158 said:

He lived in a great house for 3 years at no cost. How is that not making anything? It's free housing!


He likely had a mortgage payment over $10k/ month and taxes of $2-3k/mo, some of each being tax deductible.
GMP
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ColoradoBear1;842834160 said:

He likely had a mortgage payment over $10k/ month and taxes of $2-3k/mo, some of each being tax deductible.


Right. He bought for $2.5M. Sold for $3M. Even accounting for costs and the renovation, he likely recouped all of that mortgage and taxes in the sale.

Assuming 20% down (though, that's a big down payment), his mortgage of $2,000,000 would have had a mortgage payment of $9,548.31 at 4% interest on a 30-year fixed (though he could have gotten much lower on and would have been wise, given his profession, to do a 10-year ARM.

Regardless, I'll go with the 30-year fixed. Three years later, he'd have paid $240,013.44 in interest, and $113,273.90 in mortgage payments. His property tax bill looks to have been about $34,408.52 per year, for about $103,225.60, per the Assessor's office. I'll make an educated guess of homeowner's insurance costing about $2,000-2,500 per year. That's another $7,500.00.

That puts his total cost at $964,012.94.

As you mention, the property tax and interest is deductible, though I believe there is a limit to the interest in the first million on the home? So his deduction is about half the interest ($117,000) plus the tax of about $103,000.00. Putting him in the 39.6% tax bracket, that's a tax savings of about $88,397.34. Putting his total cost at $875,615.60.

He sold for $3M. I'll assume broker fees, etc. of about 5%. That leaves him $2,850,000.00. He has to pay off his remaining mortgage balance of $1,886,726.12. That leaves him $963,273.90. After taking out his expenditures, he profited $87,658.28.

I'm not sure how much he put into the home, but as I recall that is deductible at least as to any capital gains. He probably did lose a little bit of money with the renovations. Even if he put $150,000 into the home, that's an all-in cost of $63,000.00 to live in a great house for 3 years. Not bad.
KoreAmBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GB54;842834159 said:

We've finally found a reason to attract coaches to Cal- make a killing on real estate and move to the Midwest


What do UC? You see a gold mine.

burritos
How long do you want to ignore this user?
grandmastapoop;842834158 said:

He lived in a great house for 3 years at no cost. How is that not making anything? It's free housing!


His property taxes cost more than my mortgage.
Fyght4Cal
How long do you want to ignore this user?
socaliganbear;842834131 said:

http://www.socketsite.com/archives/2017/04/former-cal-hoops-coach-scores-on-fast-break-sale-of-east-bay-home.html


Nice catch. Rad pad.
PtownBear1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
grandmastapoop;842834170 said:

Right. He bought for $2.5M. Sold for $3M. Even accounting for costs and the renovation, he likely recouped all of that mortgage and taxes in the sale.

Assuming 20% down (though, that's a big down payment), his mortgage of $2,000,000 would have had a mortgage payment of $9,548.31 at 4% interest on a 30-year fixed (though he could have gotten much lower on and would have been wise, given his profession, to do a 10-year ARM.

Regardless, I'll go with the 30-year fixed. Three years later, he'd have paid $240,013.44 in interest, and $113,273.90 in mortgage payments. His property tax bill looks to have been about $34,408.52 per year, for about $103,225.60, per the Assessor's office. I'll make an educated guess of homeowner's insurance costing about $2,000-2,500 per year. That's another $7,500.00.

That puts his total cost at $964,012.94.

As you mention, the property tax and interest is deductible, though I believe there is a limit to the interest in the first million on the home? So his deduction is about half the interest ($117,000) plus the tax of about $103,000.00. Putting him in the 39.6% tax bracket, that's a tax savings of about $88,397.34. Putting his total cost at $875,615.60.

He sold for $3M. I'll assume broker fees, etc. of about 5%. That leaves him $2,850,000.00. He has to pay off his remaining mortgage balance of $1,886,726.12. That leaves him $963,273.90. After taking out his expenditures, he profited $87,658.28.

I'm not sure how much he put into the home, but as I recall that is deductible at least as to any capital gains. He probably did lose a little bit of money with the renovations. Even if he put $150,000 into the home, that's an all-in cost of $63,000.00 to live in a great house for 3 years. Not bad.


Chump change for him. At his current job, if you assume a 40% tax bracket, he'll be pocketing after tax $150k a month! After saving for a few months he could buy a mansion in Missouri all cash.
Big C
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The house was discussed here when he first bought it. Most all of the remodeling was done prior to that. In fact, it was so remodeled that, between previous owner and Cuonzo, they changed the number of the street address.
bear2034
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GB54;842834159 said:

We've finally found a reason to attract coaches to Cal- make a killing on real estate and move to the Midwest


Graduate from Cal, buy a home in Berkeley, sell after 3 years and move to southeast Asia or eastern Europe.
IrishCalBears
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Or Lul'ville (Louisville) - that used to be the cheapest "big city" in the country.
GMP
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Big C_Cal;842834310 said:

The house was discussed here when he first bought it. Most all of the remodeling was done prior to that. In fact, it was so remodeled that, between previous owner and Cuonzo, they changed the number of the street address.


Even better. He got paid $87k to live there.
Refresh
Page 1 of 1
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.