Luxury real estate broker Ido Berniker is speaking out against five common myths he believes continue to confuse individuals trying to understand modern housing markets. Drawing from years of experience in New York and London luxury real estate, Berniker says many people focus too heavily on headlines while ignoring the larger forces driving market behaviour.
“This is not just about one city,” Berniker said. “Capital moves globally. What happens in London can affect New York, and vice versa.”
As a founding member of Mercer Partners International, Berniker has worked on major transactions connected to properties including 220 Central Park West in New York and 1 Hyde Park in London. He says understanding supply, timing, and market cycles matters more today than ever before.
Myth #1: Luxury Real Estate Only Affects Wealthy Buyers
Why People Believe It
Luxury markets often seem disconnected from everyday life because of the high price tags involved.
The Reality
Global luxury markets can influence broader pricing trends, development patterns, and inventory levels across cities. In many major urban centres, luxury demand impacts construction priorities and housing supply.
Fact or Stat
Some global cities have seen housing inventory remain constrained for years due to limited land and planning restrictions, affecting multiple segments of the market.
Practical Tip
Track supply levels in your own city, not just prices. Inventory often reveals more about market direction than headlines do.
Myth #2: More Expensive Means More Stable
Why People Believe It
People assume high-end property markets are protected from downturns.
The Reality
Even ultra-luxury markets shift quickly when liquidity changes.
“In 2016 the market was floating with cash,” Berniker said. “Now the market is not floating with cash anymore and in America it is very tight.”
Fact or Stat
Luxury inventory in Manhattan has at times taken years to absorb at current sales pace, showing how quickly conditions can slow.
Practical Tip
Pay attention to market cycles and inventory growth instead of assuming premium markets are immune to change.
Myth #3: All Global Cities Behave the Same Way
Why People Believe It
People often compare cities only by pricing without looking at local conditions.
The Reality
Supply, planning laws, taxes, and international demand create very different outcomes from city to city.
“There’s too much inventory for that luxury and less foreign money,” Berniker said of New York, while noting London’s supply remains tighter.
Fact or Stat
London’s planning restrictions have limited large-scale luxury development in key areas, reducing future inventory.
Practical Tip
Compare at least two cities when studying market trends. It helps create perspective and context.
Myth #4: Headlines Tell the Full Story
Why People Believe It
Breaking news and market predictions dominate online coverage.
The Reality
Short-term headlines often miss long-term structural changes.
“Most people overreact to short-term trends,” Berniker said. “They forget that long-term patterns matter more.”
Fact or Stat
Housing markets often move in multi-year cycles rather than reacting permanently to single events.
Practical Tip
Spend more time tracking trends over months and years instead of reacting to daily headlines.
Myth #5: Timing Is Impossible to Understand
Why People Believe It
People assume markets are completely unpredictable.
The Reality
While no one predicts every move, understanding supply and demand improves perspective.
“You have to understand where you are in the cycle,” Berniker said. “That changes how you approach everything.”
Fact or Stat
Inventory levels, interest rates, and buyer demand consistently shape market momentum across global cities.
Practical Tip
Start following one market consistently for 30 days. Patterns become easier to recognise with repetition.
If You Only Remember One Thing
Berniker says the biggest mistake people make is viewing markets in isolation. Housing trends are connected globally through capital flow, supply constraints, and changing buyer behaviour. Looking at the bigger picture often reveals more than reacting to short-term noise.
Call to Action
Ido Berniker encourages readers to share these myths with friends and colleagues and try at least one practical tip today. Understanding how markets work starts with paying attention to patterns, not headlines.
To read the full interview, visit the website here.
About Ido Berniker
Ido Berniker is a luxury real estate broker and founding member of Mercer Partners International, specialising in ultra-high-end residential properties in New York City and international markets. He has been involved in landmark transactions connected to 220 Central Park West in New York and 1 Hyde Park in London, and is known for his insights into global real estate trends, supply dynamics, and luxury market cycles.
Contact:
Info@idobernikermiami.com
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