2025 Sydney house price record broken twice in a week
The 2025 Sydney house price record has been broken twice in a week, with two sales totalling more than $110m.
First came news yesterday via sources that the Point Piper mansion of Retail Apparel Group co-founder Stephen Liebowitz and his wife, Pam had sold for $55m, via Ray White Double Bay's Adam Reichman and Elliott Placks in conjunction with Michael Pallier of Sotheby's.
The sale occurred last week but was being kept under wraps.
And then, last night, an Instagram post from Ray White Double Bay's Riki Tawhara confirmed the sale of 38 Vaucluse Rd, Vaucluse, owned by 98-year-old philanthropist Isaac Wakil, that's sold 'above our guide of $55m'.
MORE
Whereas the first sale equalled the previous 2025 record $55m house price sale in February, of 12 Dumaresq Rd, Rose Bay, this latest deal exceeds that.
The big sales must be exciting news for Ray White Double Bay principal, Elliott Placks, who had a hand in both deals, as he prepares to move into his new five-storey Double Bay HQ next month.
Placks was tight-lipped about the buyers of both properties, citing NDAs, though it's known he had multiple buyers on both which helped create urgency.
Still, the vendors had to accept considerable discounts on their previous price guides, with the Liebowitzs original guide of February, 2024, $65m.
And although the most recent guide for the Vaucluse property may have been $55m, when it hit the market last month it was reported at 'around $70m'.
The Dumaresq Rd, Rose Bay property that sold in February, owned by recycled shopping bag tycoon Frank Qiang Gengh and his wife Juanjuan Zhao, took a $20m price cut.
Dyson Austen prestige property valuer Simon Feilich had a simple explanation for the recent rush of sales as the end of financial year approaches.
'The main driver is the low Aussie dollar and lower interest rates driving increased asset prices.'
Isaac Wakil had owned the Vaucluse Rd 1400sqm property, with its house set for the demolition ball but with panoramic Sydney Harbour views, for 65 years.
Isaac and his late wife Susan were both immigrants from Romania and Iraq and had no children.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
28 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Top 10 at 11: ASX plunges 0.63pc in first hour; BirdDog flies
Morning, and welcome to Stockhead's Top 10 (at 11… ish), highlighting the movers and shakers on the ASX in early-doors trading. With the market opening at 10am sharp eastern time, the data is taken at 10.15am, once trading kicks off in earnest. In brief, this is what the market has been up to this morning. ASX runs for cover as US bombs Iran The ASX is slumping in the first hour of trade, down 0.63% as of about 10:30 am AEST. US President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to announce that US forces had hit several nuclear sites in Iran. At this stage, there's been no retaliation from Iran, although threats have been flying all weekend. Oil markets haven't ignited as some might have expected. Brent Crude oil is up 2.8% to about US$79.17 a barrel at present, a solid lift that puts it back to January levels. That may change if things escalate, but for now the oil market is biding its time. Back at home, only 3 sectors are in the green at start of trade. Energy is unsurprisingly leading gains, up 0.75%, while Info Tech languishes, shedding 1.24%. Onto our winners and laggards for the day… WINNERS Code Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap CT1 Constellation Tech 0.002 100% 752500 $1,474,734 ENT Enterprise Metals 0.003 50% 333333 $2,362,635 GMN Gold Mountain Ltd 0.0015 50% 308261 $5,619,759 SHP South Harz Potash 0.003 50% 500000 $2,205,457 PV1 Provaris Energy Ltd 0.022 47% 4012689 $10,470,019 BDT Birddog 0.068 39% 3752360 $7,912,815 ATV Activeportgroupltd 0.011 38% 1148354 $5,479,817 ASR Asra Minerals Ltd 0.002 33% 500000 $5,987,547 DTM Dart Mining NL 0.004 33% 900000 $3,594,167 NES Nelson Resources. 0.004 33% 125000 $6,515,783 In the news... BirdDog (ASX:BDT), a software enabled video solution company, has postponed a shareholder vote on the company's voluntary delisting from the ASX until July 22. BDT intends to buyback public shares at a 112% premium to its 15-day VWAP at $0.07 a share. The board reckons it's the best move for the company as its share price has been underperforming at low levels of liquidity, at a price point they don't believe reflects BDT's inherit value. Activeport (ASX:ATV) has unveiled version 3.0 of its cloud gaming GPU orchestration solution, a network infrastructure tool provided for Radian Arc that enables GPU-based edge computing. In other words, the technology uses a network of distributed computers to process complex data, enabling users to play high-end games on low-end computers that wouldn't normally be capable of running them. The technology already nets ATV about $1m per year in licensing, with that revenue set to grow as the company deploys a further 1,600 GPUs to support its latest cloud gaming contract with Radian Arc. Nelson Resources (ASX:NES) reckons it could be sitting on a larger gold system than originally thought at the Yarri gold project's Hidden Treasure prospect, after maxing out its rock chip sampling scanner on chips grading more than 8 g/t gold. NES has sent the samples for a more fulsome assay in the lab, unable to determine their true grade with limited equipment in the field. Some of the chips come from fresh rock within the mafic volcanic unit, highlighting potential for new areas of exploration. LAGGARDS Code Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap GGE Grand Gulf Energy 0.002 -33% 201290 $8,461,275 ORP Orpheus Uranium Ltd 0.022 -21% 10708 $7,887,520 H2G Greenhy2 Limited 0.015 -21% 1665973 $11,365,499 AKG Academies Aus Grp 0.1 -20% 209999 $16,576,808 NME Nex Metals Explorat 0.02 -20% 31000 $8,352,645 BCB Bowen Coal Limited 0.15 -17% 599443 $19,396,360 AS2 Askarimetalslimited 0.005 -17% 161500 $2,425,024 TON Triton Min Ltd 0.005 -17% 50000 $9,410,332 CRR Critical Resources 0.003 -14% 273715 $9,149,774 E79 E79Goldmineslimited 0.024 -14% 254550 $4,435,554 In the news... Green HY2 (ASX:H2G) has secured firm commitments to raise about $987k in a share placement at $0.011 per share, a 21% discount on the 90-day VWAP. The money will go to bringing its energy storage products to market, including the new hybridised graphene batteries and hydrogen energy storage products.

News.com.au
44 minutes ago
- News.com.au
How rentvesting helps young buyers enter property market
Millennials and Zoomers are tearing up the homeownership playbook, ditching the quarter-acre block in favour of something smarter — and far more flexible. Rentvesting, once a fringe strategy, is now going mainstream as more first-home buyers realise they can't afford to live where they want to buy. M R Advocacy director and buyers advocate Madeleine Roberts said the shift was being driven by affordability pressures and a sharper understanding of wealth-building. 'There's been a clear uptick in younger buyers choosing rentvesting, and it's largely out of necessity,' Ms Roberts said. 'Most entry-level buyers are priced out of the areas they actually want to live inm suburbs where the median house price is well above $1m.' Instead, they're renting in lifestyle-rich areas and buying investment properties in suburbs with better growth potential. 'They're arming themselves with the right information and realising rentvesting is a smart way to build wealth without giving up lifestyle,' she said. The M R Advocacy director said the strategy is especially popular among clients using self-managed super funds (SMSFs), with some choosing to buy property inside super for long-term gain. 'A lot of people are drawn to the idea of being in control of their financial destiny rather than relying on a fund manager,' Ms Roberts said. 'But the risks are real if you don't have the right strategy. 'Whether it's property or super, you can't just wing it.' OpenCorp chief executive Cam McLellan said the most successful investors were combining strategies and staying flexible. 'You don't have to choose super or property,' Mr McLellan said. 'Smart investors are doing both. That's how you future-proof, multiple levers working together,' Mr McLellan said. Mr McLellan said younger buyers often underestimated their potential. 'Too many buyers chase the wrong thing, it's not about the biggest house, it's about buying the best-performing asset and using your cashflow wisely.' Super Members Council chief executive Misha Schubert said super shouldn't be overlooked in long-term plans. 'Super is one of the most powerful long-term tools Australians have, but it's underused and under-understood by younger people,' Ms Schubert said. She added that super could complement newer strategies like rentvesting. 'Rentvesting shows how young Australians are finding smart ways to balance lifestyle and wealth creation. 'Super can play a part in that too, especially with voluntary contributions and tax-effective savings.' Even as buyers rewrite the rules Ms Roberts said flexibility, information and strategy are the new pillars of the new Great Australian Dream. 'We're heading in that direction,' Ms Roberts said. 'Property is more expensive, but people still want to participate in the market and rentvesting gives them a way to do that without giving up on lifestyle.' 'It's adaptable, it's flexible, and it's increasingly popular with younger Australians trying to get ahead.'

News.com.au
44 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Calls to lift NSW stamp duty exemption limit
ANALYSIS With the NSW Budget for 2025–26 to be announced tomorrow, the government's policy decisions on housing are already locked in. But whatever is unveiled, one thing is clear: it's the bank of mum and dad that's already stepping up to support first home buyers. At Loan Market, we've seen guarantor-backed pre-approvals for first home buyers in NSW more than double in the past year. Around 11 per cent of these now involve a parent using their home as security, up from just 5 per cent a year ago. It's a clear signal: more young Australians are leaning on their families, not because they want to but because they have to. And the challenge goes well beyond house prices. Since 2020, rent in Sydney has jumped 44 per cent, while groceries have increased by 27 per cent at the checkout and other costs, like car insurance have soared by more than 40 per cent. These are everyday pressures, not luxuries, and they're making it even harder for people to save. At the same time, seasoned investors have returned to the market with confidence. At Loan Market, we've seen a 31 per cent rise in investor loans year-on-year. If the government is serious about helping first home buyers, the conversation can't stop at housing supply. Stamp duty is one of the biggest upfront costs they face and it's stopping many from even getting close. Right now, full stamp duty exemptions only apply to properties under $800,000, with partial concessions up to $1 million. That might have worked once, but those numbers don't reflect today's reality. Sydney's median house price sits at $1.46 million, according to PropTrack data. Even the median unit price is $820,000, already above the current threshold. Take a couple trying to buy their first apartment at that median price. If they tip over the $800,000 limit, they could be hit with nearly $33,000 in stamp duty. That's on top of their deposit, legal costs, and moving expenses. And if they're hoping to buy a house in Sydney? The median puts any stamp duty support completely out of reach. Some suggest buyers should just look further out. But for many with jobs in the city, family nearby, and deep community ties moving over 40 minutes away simply isn't realistic or fair. More and more, we're seeing first home buyers invest interstate instead, renting out the property while building equity. It's a smart move in tough conditions but it's also a sign of a broken system. Raising the full exemption threshold to $1.5 million, closer to real-world property prices, would make a genuine difference. Buyers would still need to pass strict lender serviceability tests, including a 3 per cent buffer. But it would ease one of the biggest barriers they face. And we can't forget the broader picture. First home buyers keep the market moving. When they step in, others can upsize, downsize or move where they need. When they're shut out, it slows everything down. Of course, not everyone has parents who can help. And even when they do, it often comes at a cost like delaying retirement, putting travel plans on hold, or shelving downsizing. That's where great brokers make a real difference. They help structure a pathway to reduce the debt and remove the guarantor as soon as it's viable. It's not about cutting corners, it's about smart, sustainable solutions. There's also a case for stamp duty exemptions or concessions to be given to retirees, as well. If empty nesters were encouraged to downsize from their large family homes, there would be more supply in the market for families looking to upsize. Greater supply in the market provides more choice and sustainability in prices. Stamp duty reform has been debated for years. The question now is whether tomorrow's budget will finally shift from talk to action. This isn't just a policy choice. It's an opportunity to back Australians who are doing everything right – working hard, saving hard, and leaning on family when there's no other option. It's time to support the parents who've been carrying the load, and the next generation trying to find their place in the market. It's time to turn intent into action. Here's hoping this budget delivers for those working hardest to get their start or for young Australians to get the same opportunities like others before them.