Centurion Partners is combining adjacent units and cutting asking prices by as much as $50 million at the Mandarin Oriental Residences Beverly Hills, marking one of the most aggressive repositioning efforts in the branded-residence sector since financing conditions tightened in late 2023. The 37-story tower at 9200 Wilshire Boulevard launched sales in 2021 with inventory priced between $4.5 million and $40 million.
The developer now markets merged floor plans—combining what were originally separate two- and three-bedroom units into single residences exceeding 6,000 square feet—and has reduced prices on select penthouses by 18 to 22 percent from initial ask. Units that listed at $28 million in 2022 now carry tags near $23 million. Centurion confirmed the strategy in statements to trade press but declined to specify absorption targets or remaining unsold inventory. The 66-unit building delivered in late 2024, with occupancy beginning in January 2025.
The moves arrive as branded-residence sales velocity slows across coastal gateway cities. Data from the Branded Residence Association shows that projects priced above $3,000 per square foot in Los Angeles, Miami, and New York are experiencing 40 to 60 percent longer time-to-sale compared to 2021 launches. Buyers at this tier—predominantly family offices and cross-border wealth—are deploying capital more slowly, running extended due diligence, and negotiating post-contract price adjustments that were uncommon during the 2020–2022 cycle. The Mandarin Oriental brand maintains residences in 36 cities globally, with 12 properties currently under development.
What matters for allocators: Centurion's pivot signals that even Tier-1 operator partnerships and prime-location assets face demand friction when initial pricing outpaces market clearing rates. The Beverly Hills tower sits 400 yards from Rodeo Drive, carries Mandarin Oriental's full amenity stack—private dining, spa access, dedicated concierge—and benefits from California's persistent wealth migration. Yet the developer's willingness to merge inventory and accept eight-figure price reductions suggests that brand halo alone no longer commands pricing power without corresponding absorption momentum. This dynamic is not isolated. Similar repricing has occurred at Aman Residences New York, Four Seasons Private Residences Los Angeles, and Edition Residences Miami Beach—all projects where developers initially underwrote 24-month sellout timelines now extending past 40 months.
Operators and developers should monitor whether Centurion's strategy accelerates closings over the next two quarters. If merged units move at the revised pricing, expect competing projects in gateway markets to adopt similar consolidation tactics rather than hold inventory at launch pricing. Family offices evaluating branded-residence allocations should track whether post-delivery discounts become standard negotiating leverage, potentially eroding projected resale premiums that underwrite many acquisition models. Watch also for shifts in developer financing structures: if construction lenders begin requiring higher presale thresholds—currently 50 to 60 percent for luxury projects—before releasing tranches, the branded-residence pipeline could contract sharply in 2026.
Centurion expects to close 12 to 15 additional units by mid-2025 under the revised pricing framework, according to broker disclosures filed with the California Department of Real Estate in February.