Home » today » Business » Adele has secured a huge loan for her Los Angeles mansion, bought from Sylvester Stallone. What the luxury estate looks like VIDEO

Adele has secured a huge loan for her Los Angeles mansion, bought from Sylvester Stallone. What the luxury estate looks like VIDEO

The mortgage on the mansion in the exclusive Beverly Park neighborhood of Los Angeles has been granted for 30 years and amounts to $37.7 million, according to the DailyMail.com, which notes that it is huge even for her, whose net worth is estimated at $183 million.

Adele is expected to pay $227,000 a month – including property taxes and a 5% interest rate.

The 34-year-old may now be more eager than ever to perform in the Las Vegas show at the Colosseum at Caesar’s Palace in November, where she would earn $1 million per show.

In May, Adele confirmed that she and boyfriend Rich Paul had moved into her new home together after a year of dating.

The 18,587 square foot home was designed by Richard Landry and has eight bedrooms and 12 bathrooms.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RS3q0msXjbY

According to the cited source, CNB, a subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Canada, offers very large loans at low interest rates to those who have a “special relationship” with the bank.

The loan for his latest home purchase was from City National Bank, which bills itself as the “Bank of the Stars” due to its close ties to Hollywood.

It’s the fourth home Adele has bought, having bought three side-by-side properties in the exclusive Beverly Hills suburb of Hidden Valley, where stars Jennifer Lawrence, Penelope Cruz and Nicole Kidman also live.

Adele told Vogue last October that she couldn’t afford real estate in her hometown of London: “The kind of house I have in Los Angeles, I could never afford to buy real estate in her hometown of London. to offer in London. Never. »

She adds that when she lived in London she spent most of her time in a car or inside a building and wanted to be somewhere with fresh air and where she could see the sky.

Ironically, according to the title deeds of the two properties in Kensington, London, they were paid for in full without taking out a loan.

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