Bargain homes in Spain prove popular with international buyers.

Bargain hunters in property are investing in Tenerife and Spain

Overseas nationals spent €3.6bn (£2.3bn) on buying homes in Spain in 2011, as they took advantage of significantly discounted properties, according to data supplied by the Bank of Spain. The figures show that foreign property investment in Spain increased by 27% last year compared to the preceding year.

With Spain’s economy in turmoil and the housing market in disarray, owed largely to a major oversupply of homes, property prices have been in freefall, attracting more bargain hunters in the process. The hike in property sales in 2011 marks a second consecutive year of growth in international investment with 2011 beating the total value of transactions in 2010.

Many property professionals believe that the rise in foreign investment activity is a sign that property market conditions are improving. Spanish journalist Daniel Talavera  believes that the Spanish property market is now touching rock bottom of the downturn.

“2011 has probably been the worst year in terms of property prices and sales drop. If the price fall in 2010 was by 3% compared to 2009, the mentioned fall of 6.85% in 2011 compared to 2010 confirms that the market is reaching its lowest at the right speed.”

Victory in Spanish election to herald a change in Spain’s property market?

People's Party victory in Spain may help property sales in Tenerife

The landslide victory for the People’s Party in Spain’s General Election is hoped to herald an avalanche of change for the country’s property market. The Centre-Right party’s triumph follows elections in Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal as Spain becomes the fifth Eurozone country to switch government this year. The real estate industry is now urging the government to act, as thousands of discounted homes across the country remain unsold. Tax cuts and tourism initiatives are two of the measures anticipated by property professionals, as Spain’s appeal to lifestyle buyers remains strong, partially helped by the existing VAT reduction for new homes. “Spain still has arguably the best weather in Europe, is easy to get to and property is relatively cheap,” Spanish agency Mercers commented,  while house builders such as Taylor Wimpey have seen success by slashing VAT altogether. Marc Pritchard, Taylor Wimpey’s Sales Manager, comments: “We initiated the NO VAT policy as a way of assisting potential buyers further especially seeing as buyers have executed caution when committing to Spanish property. Indeed, we have seen considerable interest in our VAT free properties since its introduction and with only weeks to go before this rare time-limited opportunity for investors to purchase their dream home in Spain VAT free ends, we are urging property hunters to invest now before it too late.” As with the UK, unemployment is a central component to Spain’s recession, particularly for under-30s, and tax changes by the PP could create jobs as well as stimulate investor interest. In Motril, for example, an ambitious land development was scrapped when the market crashed. But plans have since been changed to a reworked “sporting and marina complex” that could create 1,000 jobs, as Spanish developers look for new ways to encourage investment. The council’s chief architect Juan Fernando Perez Estevez explains to Reuters: “It is something that will attract high-end customers who will need services. And it will be the catalyst for further activity. We’ve got the infrastructure, the motorway, so this is an important development that will attract investment.” Construction has always been a key source of jobs in Spain. At the peak of the housing boom, construction,when the People’s Party (dubbed the “Pro Property Party”) were last in power, 2.8 million people were employed in the building sector, but this has now dropped to 1.4 million – just 7.8 per cent of the working population. With unemployment high, Spaniards cannot afford new homes and banks continue to repossess property. With many seized assets turning sour, banks are losing out on billions of Euros, yet the Bank of Spain accused them in recent months of “holding back” the best properties until house prices have returned to higher levels. Around 600,000 “bottom of the market bargains” are currently available on the market, according to Property in Spain. And so Spain relies on overseas buyers to boost demand. Hopes reside in the new Spanish government, recognised as taking the problem more seriously, to continue selling off land assets in prime locations and encourage foreign investment. If the Eurozone remains stable, Reuters adds, “Spain can rebuild”. Some, including Property in Spain, are looking for immediate solutions: “The new Government has one month to the start of the New Year buying season to come up with enough incentives and safeguards to get more buyers tempted by the genuine bargains and mortgage deals on offer.” As the industry awaits new incentives to clear the large stock of discounted homes, prime Costa property at cheap prices is expected to eventually bring back international buyers to the country’s sunny coasts. According to a forecast from Bankinter last week, Spain’s supply will last for several years, but houses are predicted to become even cheaper for buyers, with prices falling another 6 per cent by 2013. It is a long road to recovery but in time, the PP’s acronym may stand for “Pro Property” once again. “There won’t be any miracles. We never promised any,” said the Prime Minister-elect Mariano Rajoy, who will be sworn into office in December. “But as we have said before, when things are done properly, the results come in.”

Good news from the Spanish property market

Propert sales improve in Spain and Tenerife especially prime property by the coast

At last some good news from the Spanish property market , foreign investment is up strongly on last year. Foreigners invested 1.3 billion Euros in Q2 this year, up 16pc on the first quarter and 37pc on the same time last year, according to figures from the Bank of Spain.

Foreign investment is still some way (32pc) from the peak it reached in Q2 2003, when it hit 1.9 billion Euros, but there has been a clear improvement in the last 2 quarters.  Sales to foreigners have picked up as prices fall, showing how price-sensitive foreign demand for Spanish holiday homes is.

Certainly prime property on or near the coast in Tenerife is attracting greater interest once more.

No VAT increase in Spain says Salgado

No VAT increase in Spain, Tenerife and the Canary Islands

The Government’s financial vice president, Elena Salgado, has responded to the suggestion of the Bank of Spain to raise VAT in order to generate more revenue, by saying that the Government “will not increase VAT, since it would have a negative effect on consumption”, as was argued at the European Commission. “To be clearer, the Government will not increase the VAT,” she added.

At a press conference to present the Ministry of Development’s advertising campaign on rehabilitation, Salgado said that “fiscal policy is the responsibility of the Government which then must be approved by Parliament”, to which she added that Government revenues are behaving as expected, and “it is not necessary to raise VAT to achieve fiscal consolidation.”

In the same vein, she praised Brussels’ decision to back down in its request to raise Spain’s tax as a counterweight to a reduction in social contributions, and stressed that the European Commission has been “sensitive” to the Government’s arguments. At this point, Salgado also rejected the possibility of reducing social security contributions, stating that “we should wait a bit before taking steps in that direction,” at least to see how the pension reforms progress.

On the other hand, asked about the proposal of the bank run by Miguel Angel Fernandez Ordonez to set expenditure ceilings in the Autonomous Communities , the Minister of Economy stated that “the regions themselves must decide” if they set an expenditure ceiling, given their “financial independence.”

Source: Kyero.com

Only 15 billion Euros required to clean up Spain’s balance sheets

Spain’s banks will need just 15 billion euros ($A20.69 billion) to clean up their balance sheets, the Central Bank said Thursday, rebuffing predictions by Moody’s which sliced the country’s’ credit rating hours earlier.

The shortfall, which concerns a total of 12 banks, was less than the government’s ceiling of 20 billion euros — and well below the forecast by Moody’s ratings agency of 40-50 billion euros. The Bank of Spain’s report responded to tough government measures unveiled last month that require banks to raise their minimum levels of core capital in a bid to shore up confidence in financial institutions and the wider economy. 

Under the new regulations, the banks must raise the proportion of core capital they hold to 8.0 per cent of total assets from the current six per cent, or 10.0 per cent if they are unlisted. Those that have fallen short had to reveal by March 10 how much they need to raise to meet the new requirements.

“Overall, 12 banks must increase their capital, for an amount totalling 15.15 billion,” the Bank of Spain said in a statement.

Source: Sydney Morning Herald

Spanish real estate market to be flooded with properties from local banks.

A glut of property for 2011 in Spain,Tenerife and the Canary Isles?

Local banks in Spain and Tenerife are responsible for a flood of foreclosed properties set to hit the Spanish real estate market in 2011, it is claimed. There are now around 100,000 foreclosed homes on the market in Spain according to Madrid based Pisos Embargados de Bancos, a company that lists a quarter of that amount on behalf of 25 Spanish banks. They estimate this figure will triple to 300,000 in 2011 which could see prices fall even further at a time when the country’s economic situation is still fragile.

Whilst Spain’s economics minister, Elena Salgado, has declared that there is ‘absolutely no need’ for an Irish style rescue and Prime Minister Zapatero continues to be confident that the Government is doing enough to avert a debt crisis, the real problems are going on at sub national level. 

Although central government spending has indeed been scaled back and national debt this year will ‘only’ be 60% of GDP compared with Ireland’s near 100%, it’s Spain’s 17 autonomous regions that account for over half of the public sector deficit making it difficult to impose reforms. It’s also in the regions where the banking problems lie and the effects of the property crash have been felt the hardest.

‘When the property bubble burst, the larger national banks such as Santander and BBVA were well capitalised but the regional savings banks, the cajas, found themselves vastly exposed to the ailing construction and development sectors. Instead of emulating the national banks and putting the brakes on lending in 2006/07, the cajas did the reverse and tapped the wholesale debt markets to fund themselves,’ explained Greg Butcher, founder of Fairhomes Ltd, a cross sector real estate company with assets in the UK, Germany, Gibraltar, Singapore and the Netherlands.

‘This alone put them in jeopardy but add the fact that they supplied about half of the €318 million borrowed by Spanish property developers, loans which now represent about a fifth of the cajas assets, and you’ll understand why the outlook is so grim for them and for Spain,’ he added.

He explained that the main problem is that the balance sheets of the cajas still look quite healthy as they routinely overvalue their foreclosed property stock. ‘In a bid to make their rapidly depreciating assets look attractive to buyers, cajas are offering 100% mortgages, non payment windows, extended terms up to 50 years, interest free options and rates as low as 0.3 to 0.5% above Euribor,’ he said.

‘In order to do this, however, they’re inflating market prices by 25 to 40% which is not, realistically, going to help shift a glut of hundreds of thousands of homes. Neither is it going to enable us to judge the real price of property in Spain today.’

New accounting rules from the Bank of Spain are, however, expected to force lenders to make provision for bad loans after just 12 months rather than the current 72.  ‘This will give banks a huge incentive to lower prices and get rid of the foreclosed homes rather than prolonging the agony,’ warned Butcher.

‘It’s hoped that the capital raised will prevent Spain from requiring an Irish style bailout but, as prices are squeezed down, the caja’s balance sheets will look even more vulnerable making European aid an increasingly likely scenario,’ he added.

‘With experts predicting Spain’s banks and Government having to raise €73 billion in the first four months of 2011 and the Economist reckoning property to still be overvalued by 47.6%, it’s clear that Spain has a painful correction process ahead. We may see Salgado and Zapatero having to eat their words,’ he concluded.

Real estate sector won’t recover until mid-2011 says Bank of Spain

Real estate in Spain, Tenerife and the Canary Isles still undergoing a recovery

Real estate in Spain, Tenerife and the Canary Isles still undergoing a recovery

The Bank of Spain (BoS)  says the real estate sector in Spain, Tenerife and the Canary Isles,will remain in recession until mid-2011 at least.  Spain’s economic miracle of the last decade was largely built on an unsustainable bubble in the real estate sector. When that bubble burst, as it did in 2008, it sent the Spanish economy into a tailspin. In a new report released last week the Bank of Spain now says the real estate sector won’t start to recover until mid-2011, casting doubt on recent press reports suggesting a housing market recovery is already underway. Cheap credit sent property prices and housing starts through the roof. It was never going to last for ever, but the credit crunch made sure that it came to a particularly brutal end. When credit crunch struck, the house of cards collapsed. The BoS says that the “correction” is not yet over . “Residential (housing) investment will continue contracting until the middle of 2011,” says the report. In 2007 it peaked at 7.5% of GDP, way above the OECD average. Next year the BoS forecasts it will fall to 4%. At that point, residential investment as a percentage of GDP will have fallen below the minimum it reached in 1994, during the last recession.

All of which is bad news for the Spanish economy, dependent as it was on the real estate sector for jobs and growth. “The housing market adjustment has sever macroeconomic implications in the context of the recession,” says the BoS report. As a result of the property crisis, the sector has shed 2 million jobs. The BoS says that, by the time this drama is over, the property crash will have reduced the Spanish economy by 5.4% compared to the end of 2007.

Spanish property market grows once more

Spanish and Canarian property on the risw once more.

Spanish and Canarian property on the rise once more.

The Spanish property market grew by 16% in February compared to the same month last year, according to the latest figures to be published by the country’s National Institute of Statistics
Not including social housing, there were 35,720 home sales in February, 21,368 of them newly built and 19,665 resales. According to analysts the market has touched bottom and is starting to recovery after two years of decline but the improvement is patchy and volumes are still 47% below what they were in 2007.

An examination of the figures shows that 79% of the increase in transactions came from just two regions. Catalonia saw a 43% increase and Madrid was up 36% while the market continued to shrink or stagnate in many coastal areas popular with foreign buyers. Malaga and Alicante saw year on year increases of 3% and 3.8% respectively and Andalucia saw a 7% rise. Granada and Cadiz were both up 14% and Valencia saw 23% growth.

Local figures suggest that Marbella is leading the way to recovery with figures from the town’s tax office revealing that 2,499 properties were sold in the first three months of this year, a rise of more than 200% compared to the same period in 2009 when just 820 properties were sold and the highest for four years.

Meanwhile, the latest property price index from Tinsa shows that prices fell by 5.3% over the 12 months to the end of March, a slight improvement on the previous month. The figures from Tinsa, one of Spain’s leading appraisal companies, are however based on their own valuations not actual transaction prices.

Since the peaks of December 2007, prices are down 16.2% nationally, 22.5% on the Mediterranean coast, and 13.6% in the Canaries and the Balearics. But there are no signs of foreign property buyers returning to the Spanish market. The latest figures from the Bank of S;pain show that the amount of money invested by foreigners in Spanish property has fellen to its lowest level for a decade.

Foreigners invested €3.7 billion in Spanish property last year, the lowest level since 1999, when it was €2.9 billion. Foreign investment in Spanish real estate was down 32% last year compared to 2008, and by 48% compared to 2003, when foreign investment in Spanish property peaked.  But the weak economy, high unemployment and enormous inventory of new houses will slowdown any recovery in the Spanish market, according to a report from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Urban Land Institute into European property market trends.

The rise and fall of the Spanish property boom

Foreign investment in Spanish property has hit a decade low

Foreign investment in Spanish property has hit a decade low

If you want to chart the rise and fall of the Spanish property boom look no further than the foreign investment figures, published by the Bank of Spain.  Foreigners invested 3.7 billion Euros in Spanish property last year, the lowest level since 1999, when it was 2.9 billion.

In percentage terms, foreign investment in Spanish real estate was down 32% last year compared to 2008, and by 48% compared to 2003, when foreign investment in Spanish property peaked.

The surprising thing is the increase in foreign investment in 2007 and 2008, when the market was already cooling fast. This might have something to do with the massive corporate property investments that took place at decadent end of Spain’s property boom, before the credit crunch struck.

Going the other way, the amount invested by Spaniards in property outside of Spain fell 45% last year to 1.8 billion Euros.

Bank of Spain contemplating changes in property matters

Banking changes on property matters in tenerife and Spain may be on the way.

Banking changes on property matters in Tenerife and Spain may be on the way.

The Bank of Spain is contemplating the idea of raising provisions made by the banks for bank-owned repossessed residential properties in Spain on to their books to 30% of asset value in 2010, from 20% due to be implemented for 2009, it has been reported…

The Spain property market has endured a torrid time over the past couple of years, following a real estate boom, with values plummeting across the country.

Banks in Spain have been accepting property from struggling Spanish property developers who would have otherwise faced bankruptcy. Last month, the Bank of Spain told the banks they would be required to double their property assets provisions to 20% from 10%.