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Mansion sales and discount dining: How the oil rout has hurt the rich in Houston, Texas

Twenty months into the worst oil price crash since the 1980s, well-heeled residents of the world's oil capital of Houston, Texas are among the hardest hit largely because tanking energy firm shares make up much of oil and gas executives' compensation.

HOUSTON – Prices for mansions in Houston’s swankiest neighbourhood have tumbled in lock step with crude prices. The Houston Opera has offered free season tickets to patrons who lost their jobs within the oil bust. An expensive restaurant offers cut-price dinners.

There’s one place where OPEC can’t broker an oil deal: The fracking heartland of Texas

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Saudi Arabia and Russia took the initial step to stem the slide in oil prices. There’s only one problem: If they are successful – and that is a big if – the wildcatters of Texas, Oklahoma and North Dakota are waiting to pounce.

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Twenty months into the worst oil price crash because the 1980s, well-heeled residents from the world’s oil capital are among the hardest hit largely because tanking energy firm shares constitute a lot of gas and oil executives’ compensation.

In River Oaks, a neighbourhood of palatial mansions and lush gardens, the average sales price of a home has tumbled to US$1.3 million from US$2 million in the center of 2014 when oil began its more than 70 percent slide, according to data in the Houston Association of Realtors and Keller Williams. Median property prices in the region have already fallen further in this downturn, which isn’t yet over, than the 16 per cent stop by the previous oil slump in 2008 and 2009.

“When oil does well, River Oaks does well. When oil does bad River Oaks does bad,” said Paige Martin, a Keller Williams broker which specializes in the area. “Few people are able to afford a US$10 million house.”

City-wide data also reveal that while overall sales of single homes fell 2 per cent in January, sales of those priced over US$500,000 tumbled 9 percent. The general median house price was US$200,000, up 5 per cent around the year, according to the realtors’ association.

While Houston’s economy is much more diversified now than in the 1980s once the city lost 13 per cent of its jobs, it remains home to 5,000 energy-related firms and also the fortunes of oil and gas executives are tied more than ever to the energy market.

Since U.S. lawmakers passed a law in 1992 encouraging “performance-based” pay, the share of investment in executive compensation has steadily increased, said David Bixby, head of the Houston office for Pearl Meyer compensation consultants.

“Now, you’re looking at 70 to 80 percent of CEO compensation available on average for gas and oil companies,” he explained. “They will come in contact with commodity price cycles.”

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