28 Argonne

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Weekly Seller Report | 28 Argonne Ave
Multifamily · Belmont Shore

28 Argonne Avenue

Weekly Seller Report • April 23, 2026

Executive Summary

Current List Price
$1,759,000
Cumulative Days on Market
287 Days (21 on current listing)
Property
4-Unit Multifamily • 2,700 sqft • Built 1928
Unit Mix
Two 1BR/1BA • Two 2BR/1BA
This Week's Signal: Investor inquiries are building into the early marketing window of the current listing. No showings yet — standard for a tenant-occupied listing where interior access opens after an accepted offer. Two of the three competing active properties reduced prices this month (one by nearly 9%), signaling that sellers across the segment are recalibrating to meet buyers where they are. Subject is already priced at a level the market has validated: a fully executed contract was accepted at $1,759,000 in March before falling out of escrow for reasons unrelated to price. The vacancy delivery of three of four units at close remains the single largest differentiator among active comparable properties.

This Week's Activity

Marketing activity and buyer engagement during the week ending April 23, 2026.

Buyer Inquiries
A handful
Several investor inquiries came in this week requesting additional information on rent rolls, operating expenses, and vacancy delivery terms. Continuing active follow-up with each contact to gauge seriousness and address questions.
Showings Confirmed
0 scheduled
As a tenant-occupied 4-unit, interior access opens once an acceptable offer is received subject to inspection. This is standard for Belmont Shore multifamily and is not a signal of buyer disinterest — it is how this asset class transacts.
Offers Received
0 to date
No written offers yet at 21 DOM. Investors typically spend 2–4 weeks evaluating rent rolls, pro formas, and cap rate assumptions before writing. This timeline is well within normal.
Cumulative Days on Market
287 days
CDOM reflects the full marketing history since initial listing in July 2025, including time spent under contract in March. The current listing cycle is only 21 days in. The March contract — a fully executed offer at today's asking price — is useful validation that the market accepts the current number.

Listing History & Context

Full transparency on the 287-day cumulative history. Any sophisticated buyer will see the CDOM number on MLS and research the prior contract activity — getting ahead of the story positions us from strength rather than defense.

DateEventPriceChange
Jul 8, 2025First listed (MLS PW25151467)$1,795,000Original list
Aug 16, 2025Price reduced$1,759,000−$36K / −2.0%
Mar 2, 2026Accepted offer — went Under Contract$1,759,000Contract
Mar 26, 2026Escrow cancelled — returned to Active$1,759,000Fell out
Apr 1, 2026New MLS listing opened (PW26070133)$1,759,000Re-listed
Apr 23, 2026Current status — Active, 21 days on current listing cycle$1,759,000CDOM: 287
Context Matters: The March contract is a meaningful data point, not a liability. A qualified buyer underwrote 28 Argonne at $1,759,000 and crossed into escrow — confirming that today's asking price works in the market. The cancellation resulted from buyer-side circumstances, not property condition, title, or appraisal. When future buyers ask about CDOM, the honest and accurate answer is that the market has already validated this price point once.

Financing Environment

30-Year Fixed
6.23%
▼ 0.07% vs last week
Freddie Mac PMMS
April 23, 2026

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage declined for the second consecutive week to 6.23% — the lowest level across the last three spring homebuying seasons. One year ago, the benchmark was 6.81%, representing a 58 basis point year-over-year improvement.

Implication for investor buyers: Non-owner-occupied 2–4 unit residential financing typically prices 50–75 basis points above the PMMS benchmark, which means qualified investors are currently seeing rates in the mid-to-high 6s on conventional investor loans. Every 25 bps of rate decline meaningfully improves debt service coverage math on a property like 28 Argonne.

Recent Belmont Shore multifamily closings confirm buyer activity is healthy at current rates. Three of the four recently closed comps used financing (two Cash-to-Loan, one Conventional), with just one all-cash transaction. Declining rates support continued investor engagement.

Supply & Demand Analysis

SUPPLYMODERATE
  • 4 active multifamily listings in Belmont Shore ($1.5M–$1.9M range)
  • • Active price range: $1,549,000 – $1,895,000
  • • Subject ranks #2 of 4 by list price
  • Two of three competing actives cut prices this month:
  • – 143 Pomona: −$155,000 (−8.9%) on April 2 — largest cut in the segment
  • – 150 Saint Joseph: −$55,000 (−2.8%) on April 6
  • • Both reduced listings still sitting at 50 CDOM with no offers
Supply Insight: Two-thirds of the competing active listings reduced prices in the first week of April, and neither reduction has produced a buyer yet. 143 Pomona's nearly 9% cut is particularly aggressive — a seller going that low that fast signals urgency. Subject does not need to follow this pattern. The current price was already validated in March by an accepted offer, and the only list adjustment subject has made in 287 days of marketing was the modest $36K cut back in August.
DEMANDSELECTIVE
  • 4 recent closings in Belmont Shore multifamily over the past 6 months
  • • Closed price range: $1,275,000 – $1,625,000
  • • 140 St. Joseph closed in 8 days at 98.5% of list (last week)
  • • Mispriced listings took 90–132 DOM and closed 3–10% below list
  • • All four closings involved financing or Cash-to-Loan structures
Demand Insight: Belmont Shore multifamily is transacting. The market is rewarding quality + correct pricing with fast closes at near-list values, and punishing stale/overpriced listings. Subject's positioning and vacancy delivery story should appeal to the same buyer segment that absorbed 140 St. Joseph last week.

Belmont Shore Multifamily Competitive Set

Active Listings
AddressList PriceUnits$/UnitDOMStatus
150 Saint Joseph$1,895,0005$379,00050Reduced from $1,950K
28 Argonne Ave — YOUR LISTING$1,759,0004$439,75021Active
143 Pomona$1,595,0003$531,66750Reduced from $1,750K
69 Glendora$1,549,0004$387,25021Active

Subject is priced in the middle of the active set on a per-unit basis ($440K/unit). Both properties above subject's price have taken meaningful reductions in April and are still sitting at 50 CDOM without offers. Subject, priced below both, received an accepted offer at current asking in March.

Recent Closed Sales
AddressListSoldUnitsDOMClose
140 Saint Joseph$1,650,000$1,625,00038 days98.5% of list • 4/16/26
75 Granada$1,299,000$1,275,00049098.2% of list • 4/3/26
120 Granada$1,525,000$1,380,00033690.5% of list • 11/14/25
267 La Verne Ave$1,575,000
(orig. $1,875K)
$1,525,0004132 days96.8% of final list • 10/30/25

The closed-comp pattern tells a consistent story: properties priced correctly out of the gate close quickly at near-list values (140 St. Joseph in 8 days, 75 Granada at 98% despite tenant-occupied). Properties that overprice get punished (267 La Verne required a $300K cut from original list and 132 days; 120 Granada closed 9.5% below list). Subject is positioned to follow the first pattern rather than the second.

Investment Positioning

How the subject frames up against the comp set on the metrics investor buyers actually care about.

Price per Unit
$440K
Mid-range of actives ($379K–$532K)
Current Cap Rate
~3.1%
Based on actual in-place rents
Pro Forma Cap Rate
~4.9%
If rents reach market ($122K gross)
Rent Upside
+46%
Actual $84K to pro forma $122K
Vacancy Delivery
3 of 4
Seller willing to deliver 3 units vacant
Pro Forma Gross Rent
$122K
Market-rate annual rent at full turnover
Positioning Thesis: Subject is a value-add investor play with a rare combination of three-unit vacancy delivery and substantial below-market rents. A buyer with a plan to reposition the three deliverable units at close can underwrite toward the pro forma cap rate immediately, rather than waiting multiple years for natural turnover. The March escrow confirms at least one qualified buyer was persuaded by this thesis at the current price. This is the story that should lead every conversation with interested investors.

Strategic Recommendations

1. Convert Inquiries to Offer Writers

Multifamily investors spend weeks underwriting before they write. Continue the proactive follow-up cycle with each inquiring party — send an updated pro forma, offer to walk the exterior, and invite questions on the rent roll. The goal for the next 14 days is to convert at least one inquiry into a subject-to-inspection offer, which opens interior access and starts the real negotiation.

2. Lead Every Conversation With the Vacancy Delivery Story

Delivering three of four units vacant at close is the single most differentiating feature of this listing. Any investor doing a cross-comp with the active set should come away understanding that subject is the only asset in the segment that allows an immediate rent reset on 75% of the property on day one — eliminating the multi-year wait for natural turnover that the other listings require.

3. Prepare a Consistent Narrative Around the March Escrow

Any investor who researches this property will see the 287 CDOM and will ask about the prior contract activity. Get ahead of the question with a prepared, honest answer: a qualified buyer was under contract at current list price in March, and the cancellation was unrelated to property condition, title, or appraisal. Framed this way, the contract history becomes an asset — confirming market validation of the current price — rather than a liability. Align messaging across all buyer conversations so the story is consistent.

4. Frame the Pro Forma as Realistic, Not Aspirational

The jump from $84K actual to $122K pro forma is large, and investors will probe it. Prepare a one-page rent comparison showing what comparable 1BR and 2BR units in Belmont Shore are actually renting for today — this converts the pro forma from a seller's wish to a defensible underwriting case. Recent CoStar or RentCafe pulls for the zip code would reinforce the point.

5. Watch Competitor Price Action & Hold Current Price

With two of three competing actives already reduced this month and still sitting at 50 CDOM, the segment is signaling a softer bid for upper-end multifamily. Subject does not need to react — current pricing is already market-validated. However, if 150 Saint Joseph cuts again toward $1,795K–$1,810K, the top of the active set resets and we revisit. On the current listing cycle, hold $1,759,000 through approximately day 45 (mid-May) before considering any price action.

Market Verdict

The Belmont Shore multifamily market is actively separating right-priced quality from overpriced inventory. Two of the three competing active listings reduced prices this month — one by nearly 9% — and both remain unsold at 50 CDOM. Subject has not had to follow that pattern because the current $1,759,000 list was already validated in March by a fully-executed contract that entered escrow. The three-unit vacancy delivery is the single most compelling feature an investor will find in the active set, and the March contract confirms that a qualified buyer was persuaded by the full thesis at current pricing. At 21 days on the current listing cycle with inquiries active, the work this week is conversion: moving interested investors from information-gathering into written offers. When the CDOM question comes up, the March escrow is our answer — framed correctly, it works in our favor.

Next Week's Focus: Continue proactive follow-up with inquiring parties and aim to surface at least one offer candidate. Monitor 150 Saint Joseph for any further price reduction, which would reset the top of the active set. Track the new weekly Freddie Mac rate release on Thursday, May 1 for continued rate direction.