Thursday, April 30, 2009

New Spanish mortgage approvals fall 37pc

New Spanish mortgage approvals in February fell by 37% year on year, to 51,827, according to new figures from Spain’s National Institute of Statistics (INE). Falling mortgage approvals are a clear feature of a shrinking property market.

New Spanish mortgage approvals have been declining for 20 months, and have decline by more than 20% almost every month since January 2008.
Looking on the bright side, February’s decline in new mortgage approvals was smaller than January’s, when the slumped by 43.5% year on year.
The average value of new mortgages also fell in February compared to the same month last year, by 17% to 123,643 Euros. But on a monthly basis, the average mortgage value rose a fraction, by 1.3%, for the first time in 12 months. That may be an indicator that the property market is starting to find a floor, or it may just be a blip.
Interest rates on new mortgages rose, however, despite an extraordinary drop in base rates. The average rate on new mortgages, at 5.4%, was 5.9% higher than a year ago, despite the base rate falling from 4.349% to 2.135%.
It was also reported today in the Spanish press that Spain’s biggest real estate companies have a combined debt of 300,000 billion Euros.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Spanish property market shrinks by 40pc in February


The Spanish property market shrank year-on-year by 40% in February, according to the latest figures from the National Institute of Statistics (INE). Excluding social housing, there were 30,822 property transactions in February, compared to 51,343 a year before.



The second lowest monthly sales results on record, this is a blow after sales figures in December gave optimists hope that the market might be starting to bottom out. The market fell by 41% in January, and February shows that the Spanish property market, measured by sales activity, is still contracting rapidly.


As the table above shows, property sales fell the most in The Balearics, by 54.6%, followed by Asturias (-53%), and Catalonia (-52.3%). None of Spain’s autonomous regions escaped negative figures.


Once again resale transactions were down the most, by 45%, compared to a fall of 29% for newly built properties, giving the impression that the new build market is faring comparatively well. That is misleading. In reality, new sales by developers have collapsed in the last 12 months, but thanks to long lead times in the construction industry, the full impact of this has yet to show up in the INE’s market figures. As the year proceeds, the monthly data for new build sales will fall off rapidly.


With the glut of newly built properties still growing to an estimated 1 million this will put further downward pressure on prices

Sourge: Spanish property

Spanish property still over-priced by some standards


The chart says highly overpriced


Despite a market crash and recent price falls, property in Spain is some of the most over-priced in the developed world, according to new figures published by The Economist magazine. Spanish house prices need to fall by around 50% to get back to the long-term average, if the figures are to be believed.


The Economist looks at property prices in the OECD (a club of developed countries) in relation to rents and incomes, comparing them to the long-term average for both measures.


By the standards of the price-to-rent ratio, Spanish property is the most over-priced in the OECD, around 80% above the long-term average. By the price-to-income ratio, Spain is the second least affordable country, 44% above the long-term average, behind only the Netherlands.


Property prices “will have to fall still more in most countries if affordability…is to return to its long-term average,” says The Economist.


Look where Japan is, almost 2 decades after its own property bubble burst. The lowest property prices in the OECD by both measures. Could that be what lies in wait for Spain?


Bear in mind that The Economist will be using official housing market data, which in Spain can be highly misleading. It is possible that real Spanish property prices are already considerably lower than The Economist believes, making Spanish property more affordable than the chart implies.

Source : Spanish property

Market could take 3 years or more to absorb property glut


The Spanish property market will take 3 years to absorb the glut of 1 million new homes, an official from Spain’s property register claimed recently. Even if no more new homes were built the glut would still take 2 years to liquidate. In reality, Spain is on course to start close to 200,000 new homes this year.


The same official also claimed that demographic changes are also partly to blame for the recent drop in Spanish property sales, whereas most of the sector like to blame the financial crisis. Spain’s falling birth rate in the 80s means that demand for housing is “drying up”, despite the massive immigration of recent years.
Sourge: Spanish property

Monday, April 20, 2009

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Spanish property prices fall 6.8pc, officially

Spanish Property Price data for selection of regions

Average Spanish property prices fell by -6.8% in the first quarter of the year, compared to the same time last year, according to official figures just out from the Ministry of Housing. This is the first time since the Spanish property market downturn began that the official figures look even vaguely realistic.

On a quarterly basis, Spanish house prices fell by -3% in the first 3 months of the year, compared to a fall of -2.4% in the final quarter of 2008.

For the annual figures, there were big differences between regions, with prices falling by -10.7% in Malaga province, home to the Costa del Sol, but by just -1.1% in Extremadura.

With the exception of Malaga province, the biggest falls were to be found in ‘real Spain’, well away from the coasts where foreigners tend to buy holiday homes. Prices fell by -14.6% in Toledo (Castilla La Mancha), -12.3% in Salamanca (Castilla Leon), and -11.9% in Guadalajara (Castilla La Mancha)

The following table shows average prices per m2 and quarterly, annual and 10-year prices changes for a selection of regions popular with foreign buyers.

Sourge: Spanish Property Insight

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Spanish government to shed light on housing market with new study


Where are you if you can’t see anything around you, and don’t have a map? Lost, most likely, just like the Spanish property market, where a lack of reliable data means nobody really knows where the market is heading, other than somewhere South.

But at a time like this, when the property market is the key to an economic crisis, having some idea of where you are is crucial. Which is why the government plans to create a ‘housing map’ to quantify the scale of Spain’s housing bust. It will be the most “up to date and detailed analysis possible of the residential construction sector in Spain,” a spokesperson from the Ministry of Housing told the Spanish news website elconfidencial.com.

One of the big questions to answer will be ‘how large is the surplus stock of new properties that is keeping developers and banks awake at night?’ Developers say between 650,000 and 700,000, whilst other experts and analysts say between 900,000 and 1 million.

“The Government has a major interest in knowing how much unsold stock there is. The longer we take to quantify it, the longer it will take for the housing market, and therefore the job market to recover,” said the Ministry of Housing.

It doesn’t help that Spain has the highest ratio of properties to households in Europe, and one of the highest in the world. With a housing stock of 26.2 million compared to 18 million households, there are almost 1.5 properties to every household in Spain, according to figures from the Bank of Spain. So it’s not as if there is an acute shortage of housing, though some would argue there is a shortage of the right kind of property, in the right place, at the right price.



Sourge: Spanish Property Buff

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Interview With Sylvain




Hi Sylvain! Who are you? Tell a little story about yourself.

Hi everyone, my name is Sylvain; I live nearby Avignon in the south of France where I have been studying foreign languages, International trade and Management for about 4 years. I am a big football fan and have a real passion for chess since my childhood. I have spent the last term of my bachelor’s degree in Victoria, Canada, British Columbia.
What is your Job @ Casamona?

I am working as an intern in Casamona’s rental department within the framework of my Master’s degree. I am doing some online marketing but the biggest part of my job consists in finding new apartments to add to our property range and arranging visits for our clients.


What attracted you to Barcelona?

I have always heard Barcelona’s was among the most attractive cities of the world. I was really interested in living in this multicultural city, full of art and history. I also wanted to enjoy the great nightlife, the sun and the nice beaches.


How are you enjoying your experience in Casamona so far?

I have been working in Casamona’s rental department for more than a month now and I am really enjoying my job as well as the office atmosphere. I have been learning many things about the real estate market. Moreover, I have the opportunity to improve both my English and Spanish every single day while interacting with my colleagues as well as with the clients and owners we work with.

Sylvain, please... Can you give us a little Insider tip about Barcelona?

Besides the Barceloneta beach, Parc Guell and Parc Ciutadella are among the most beautiful places to enjoy a relaxing afternoon under Barcelona’s sun.

Signs of recovery in the Spanish property market?


A brighter outlook for Spain's property market?


An article in ‘El Mundo’, one of Spain’s leading news papers, suggests there may be signs of recovery in the Spanish property market, in one of the first positive articles on the outlook for the market since the crisis began.


“It appears to be the beginning of the end of the worst period for property sales since the crisis began,” says the article.


Pointing to encouraging signs that real estate markets may have bottomed out in the US, the UK, and France, the article suggests that Spain may be part of the trend.


The optimism also comes from a new report by Gonzalo Bernardos, a property market expert and professor of economics at the University of Barcelona, who argues that Spanish property market will come back to life this year, after a dismal 2008.


“There are five key reasons for saying that there will be more home sales in 2009 than there were in 2008,” writes Bernardos in his report. “Interest rates are lower; house prices have fallen back to their 2003 levels; banks are lending more; investors are coming back; and many people who were thinking of renting have decided to buy.”


Demand for housing is tempered by the cost of mortgage borrowing. With interest rates declining, Bernardos expects sales to pick up.


“There is a fundamental variable,” explains Bernardos. “People buy homes in response to mortgage costs, which have gone from rates of 6.25% in September to 3.25% today. We are talking, in general terms, of a fall in mortgage repayments of 40%.”


There is, however, a flaw in this argument, which the article in El Mundo does not pick up. Euribor – the base rate normally used to calculate mortgage rates in Spain – may have fallen rapidly to historic lows, but the average interest rate charged on new mortgages is actually rising, and credit terms getting tighter, making it more expensive for new borrowers to buy homes. Falling Spanish mortgage rates are only benefiting existing borrowers, who already have a home.


Another positive sign, says the article, is that housing starts picked up in the last quarter of 2008, rising by 7% compared to the previous quarter.


The recovery is already underway, suggests Bernardos, who says that, so far this year “sales have been between 25% and 40% higher than in the same period last year.”


Think Positive

So the market bottomed out in 2008, goes the argument, when house sales fell by 28.8% (13% for new builds and 41% for resales) whilst property prices fell by 5.4%, all according to official figures. On the question of prices, Bernardos doesn’t believe the official figures. “The fall in prices hasn’t been less than 20%, and in some places much more,” says Bernardos.


Another real estate expert cited in the article say that sales rates at new developments have picked up significantly. “In many developments they have sold more in the first quarter of 2009 than in the whole of 2008,” he says, also arguing that “prices have already bottomed out.”


“Banks didn’t know where the bottom was, now they do and they are giving 80% mortgages because the feel the market has bottomed out,”

he goes on, whilst also warning that “nobody should expect bargains at 50% discounts. That’s not going to happen.”


Whilst Bernardos expects the market to return to life this year, that doesn’t mean he expects prices to start rising soon.


“Sales will start to rise in 2009, whilst prices will stop falling in most places by the end of 2010,” writes Bernardos in his report.


But if Bernardos is right, and prices continue to fall this year, that will encourage people to delay their purchase decision, and reduce the number of sales. The article does not pick any holes in his arguments.


And at no point does the article mention of the second home market, which operates differently to the primary housing market. Given the present state of the economy, with unemployment rising across Europe, it’s not hard to imagine that it may take a while longer for sales of holiday homes to pick up.


Sourge: Spanish property insight

Monday, April 6, 2009

Asking prices could fall by up to 40% this year says new report


Asking prices could fall by as much as 40% for certain types of resale property argues a new report from the Network of Property Experts (Red de Expertos Inmobiliarios).


A fall in sales activity to “historic lows” of an average of 9,000 resale properties per month lies behind the downward pressure on prices. “Buyers have disappeared from the market,” says the report. “That pushes vendors into dropping their asking prices; if in the past this was done with reductions of 2% to 3%, now the drop is around 30% to 40%.


”Falling sales are explained by “the severe restrictions and tightening up of conditions for mortgage credit,” explains the report.


The recovery in Spain’s housing market won’t begin until next year, and will take 4 years to complete, according to Eduardo Molet, President of Red de Expertos Inmobiliarios.


The report makes the point that some areas will do better than others. Prices will fall more in areas with a lot of new construction and land available for more building than in consolidated areas such as city centres.


Some types of property will also fare better than others. 2-bedroom flats in city centres will enjoy the strongest demand, but “if properties are ground floor or first floor flats, interior facing with a poor distribution, they will not have any demand, which means a major fall in prices.


”At the same time, a new report from the international bank Credit Suisse argues that official data suggesting a 9% fall in Spanish house prices over the last year “do not reflect the real situation in the market”. It said prices are still an unsustainable 7.2 times household earnings. “Many families are spending 60% to 70% of their disposable income paying the mortgage.


”Credit Suisse also chided Spanish banks offering 100% mortgages to dump their repossessions, warning that these properties may still be 50% overvalued, even after the discounts.


Sourge: Spanish Property

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Eixample a Fantatic Neighbourhood


Around the 1950s Barcelona entered a phase of rapid expansion. The architect I. Cerda was appointed to design a new neighbourhood, Eixample - meaning “extension” or “enlargement” in Catalan. From his original plans only the grid pattern of the blocks has remained. In terms of the architectural design this district was way ahead of its time.


Domènech i Montaner, Puig i Cadafalch and especially Gaudí were amongst the greatest architects of Catalan history. Some of their most famous buildings can be found in Eixample. This neighbourhood is almost like an open-air museum! But Eixample is also a chic shopping district, all the big brands have outlets in this area so there is always something to see and do!


There are many fantastic properties available in this wonderful barrio for both sale and rent. For example, Casamona has beautiful properties to suit all tastes and budgets – from €247.000 to over €3.000.000.