Increasing numbers of Scandinavians are taking advantage of the crisis to buy holiday homes in Spain

Scandanavian buyers of property are looking to Tenerife and Spain for investment

According to a recent article at the website Investment Europe, “Figures published by Fastighetsbyrån, part of Swedish banking group Swedbank, suggest Swedish and Norwegian property buyers have pushed hard into the Spanish residential property market, as British and German buyers have withdrawn in the past half-decade.”

The article goes onto explain that “over the four year period, the number of UK buyers has dropped by 65% and German buyers by 3%. However, the number of Norwegian buyers is up 108%, and Swedes by 138%. The total market is still down 33% from its 2007 peak, the figures also suggest.”

Scandinavians are tempted by Spanish property, their economies are relatively strong, as are their currencies (the Norwegian and Swedish Krone/Krona have both risen by around 5pc against the Euro since the Spanish property bubble burst at the end of 2007, whilst the British Pound has fallen almost 20pc); Spanish property prices on the coast are down around 50pc or more from the peak, and the sun doesn’t shine much back at home. So Scandinavian buyers are taking advantage of the market to snap up bargains on the Mediterranean coast, and who can blame them?

Scandinavian buyers are not a panacea for the glut of holiday homes on the coast. For a start, with the pick of the best properties, I doubt they will be tempted by  the cheaper end of the market on the coast that also needs to be sold.  Unfortunately, there just aren’t enough of them to take the place of the retreating Brits, who dominated the market during the boom.

All time record visits to Spain in August

Record numbers of visitors to Spain and Tenerife during August

In August this year 7.64 million foreign tourists visited Spain, an all-time record for the country.

According to reports from FRONTUR, August saw a 9.4 per cent increase in the number of tourists from 2010, indicating a new monthly high for the booming Spanish tourism industry.

Since the beginning of 2011, 40 million tourists have visited Spain, a 7.8 per cent increase over the same period last year. The Ministry of Industry which produces the tourist movement survey suggests that August visitor figures ‘reinforces the good prospects of Spain in 2011′ highlighted by the fourth best year in the history of Spanish tourism, a great achievement considering the economic recovery only began back in the second half of 2010.

Further data indicates that while Brits are one of the most regular and indeed loyal visitors to Spanish shores standing at 9.5 million, there has been impressive increases in numbers of other foreign visitors, with a rise in American, German and talian visitors. By destination, Catalonia was the largest recipient of foreign tourists receiving 1.9 million visitors in August, while the Balearic Islands followed closely behind with 1.8 million.

Ignacio Osle, Sales & Marketing Manager of Taylor Wimpey España, comments, “Despite difficult economic conditions across mainland Europe, Spain is one of the most resilient holiday destinations, remaining popular with foreigners whatever the market conditions. Recently, the IMF stated that Spain will be the only country that will experience higher levels of growth next year compared to its European counterparts of France, Italy and Greece.”

The rising number of overseas visitors continues to spell good news for the property industry. Osle adds: “Mallorca is one such destination that has performed better on the property front than its mainland counterparts offering strong rental market potential.”

British property buyers keen on Tenerife and Spain

British overseas property buyers are becoming more interested in owning homes in nearby Europe than further away as transport costs increase, according to Rightmove Overseas.

The UK-based listings website’s search report for May showed an overall increase in searches for overseas property of 15.3% compared to April.

The top movers included Poland, which broke into the top 20 for the first time as searches increase by 248%. Elsewhere, the German region of Bavaria had 82% more searches month-on-month and 17 out of Italy’s 20 regions recorded increased user activity. In France, the Dordogne, Aquitaine and Limousin regions all received increases in enquiries, with 74%, 47% and 39% respectively.

Shaheem Golamy, head of Overseas at Rightmove, told OPP this week: “After the bank holidays in April, searches for overseas property increased by 15% in May as people settled back into their normal routine.”

Tenerife continues to remain extremely popular amongst holiday makers and prospective purchasers of second homes.

Source: OPP.org.uk

Less stays in owner properties says IET

Less owners staying in their own properties in Spain and Tenerife say IET

Visits to Spain by British owners fell by 17pc, whilst visits by German owners were down 11pc, reveals a new report by the government-sponsored Institute of Tourism Studies (IET).

The drop in the number of tourists staying in their own properties was much more pronounced than the fall in the number of hotel bookings, which, in the case of British tourists, were down just 0.6pc last year.

The study also found that British tourists staying in their own holiday-homes spent 55 Euros/day on average, compared to 111 Euros/day average for hotel guests. Spaniards staying in holiday-homes spent an average of 21 Euros/day.

30% of Spaniards stayed in holiday-homes in 2009, compared to just 8.6pc of foreign visitors.

Holiday-lettings also fell in 2010, -13.5pc in the case of British tourists, and 13.4pc in the case of Germans. Bad news for landlords on the coast.

The decline in the number of tourists staying in holiday-homes coupled with the crisis means that “the purchase of a holiday-home is at present far from a priority for the average family,” concludes the report

British owners of holiday-homes in Spain paid far fewer visits last year, says a new study.

British visitors to second homes on Tenerife buck the trend in Spain

Visits to Spain by British owners fell by 17pc, whilst visits by German owners were down 11pc, reveals a new report by the government-sponsored Institute of Tourism Studies (IET).

The drop in the number of tourists staying in their own properties was much more pronounced than the fall in the number of hotel bookings, which, in the case of British tourists, were down just 0.6pc last year.

The study also found that British tourists staying in their own holiday-homes spent 55 Euros/day on average, compared to 111 Euros/day average for hotel guests. Spaniards staying in holiday-homes spent an average of 21 Euros/day.

30% of Spaniards stayed in holiday-homes in 2009, compared to just 8.6pc of foreign visitors.

Holiday-lettings also fell in 2010, -13.5pc in the case of British tourists, and 13.4pc in the case of Germans. Bad news for landlords on the coast.

The decline in the number of tourists staying in holiday-homes coupled with the crisis means that “the purchase of a holiday-home is at present far from a priority for the average family,” concludes the report.

However interest in prime property in Tenerife and the Canary Islands continues to increase and the second home visits seem to be bucking the trend of mainland Spain.

Spain winning battle to restore economic growth

Zapatero is winning Spain's economic battle.

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero is beating his Portuguese counterpart Jose Socrates as they battle to convince investors they can stem the debt crisis and restore economic growth.

The extra yield investors demand to own Portuguese 10-year bonds rather than Spanish securities has climbed this year, approaching levels reached just prior to Ireland’s November bailout. It cost a record 215 basis points more this week to insure against Portugal defaulting than its Iberian neighbour. Zapatero adopted austerity earlier than Socrates. In a U- turn, he embraced public-wage cuts six months before Socrates did, raised the retirement age, made it cheaper to fire workers and forced lenders to hold more capital. Portugal, whose central government deficit widened for the first 10 months of last year, denies it needs aid as borrowing costs near a euro-era record.

“It seems that the adjustments the Spanish government has made and the tighter rules they are applying to the banks are having a convincing effect on investors,” said Marius Daheim, a senior fixed-income strategist at Bayerische Landesbank in Munich. “Spain is getting the benefit of the doubt and is increasingly being perceived as a turnaround story, while Portugal is seen as a target for the rescue fund.”

The yield spread between Spanish 10-year bonds and their German counterparts has narrowed 26 basis points since Dec. 31 to 223 basis points today, while Portugal pays 73 basis points more relative to bunds than at the end of 2010. Bond trading signals that while Portugal is struggling to convince investors it won’t need to turn to the 440 billion-euro ($606 billion) European Financial Stability Facility rescue fund, Spain is seen at less risk of collapse.

Spanish bonds are “certainly getting better” as a potential investment, Andrew Bosomworth, a money manager at Pacific Investment Management Co., said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move” with Francine Lacqua on Feb. 21. “Real economic progress and healing is starting to take place,” he said. Pimco manages the world’s largest bond fund.

Zapatero announced additional measures today aimed at tackling the 20 percent unemployment rate, telling Parliament the government will step up vocational training in schools. The prime minister, who has pledged to change rules on wage- bargaining by the end of next month, also said the nation has to improve its competitiveness. 

Source: Kyero

Buying homes in Tenerife are back in vogue for buyers from Northern Europe

Buying homes in Tenerife is back in vogue

After years of absence, Northern European buyers are back buying homes in The Canaries, if data from local real estate companies is to be believed. British, German, and Scandinavian buyers made up 20pc of the market in the last year and a half, according to reports in the Spanish press (Provincias).

Resurging demand is being driven by stronger economies in the North coupled with lower property prices in The Canaries. Beach-front properties between 110,000 and 120,000 Euros are most in demand, particularly in Tenerife’s prime property areas, such as Adeje and Fanabe.

Turmoil in Egypt means more tourists in Tenerife

The troubles in Egypt and Tunisia have lead to an increase in tourism in Tenerife and the Canary Islands

The political turmoil in Egypt and Tunisia has European tour operators scrambling to divert package tours to more stable destinations, and several thousand tourists have already been re-routed to beaches in Spain, particularly Tenerife and the Canary Islands a Spanish tourism industry official told CNN.

“We can’t be happy about unfortunate circumstances elsewhere,” said Rafael Gallego Nadal, president of the Spanish Federation of Travel Agency Associations. “But the increase (in tourists) has arrived at an important moment” as Spain recovers from a deep economic slump.

In addition to the few thousand extra British, German and Scandinavian holidaymakers who’ve already arrived in Spain’s Canary Islands, predictions are there could be tens of thousands of additional vacationers by May, Gallego said.

For now, the seven-island Canaries archipelago, located in the Atlantic Ocean just west of Morocco, is the only part of Spain that can compete directly with Egypt and Tunisia for the beach vacation business in winter.

Time to return and buy property in Spain and Tenerife?

Time to return to the property market in Tenerife as prices start to rise?

Time to return to the property market in Tenerife as prices start to rise?

We may think that we are savvy property investors, but are we really any good at investing abroad?  Many British investors crashed and burned in Spain over the last decade. German investors, on the other hand, largely avoided the trouble and are now purchasing from distressed British vendors. Germans always used to be big buyers in Spain and the Canary Islands, but from around 2003 onwards  many sold to British buyers after several years of surging property prices. Now it looks like they are back.They bought low and sold high, and now they are back to buy low again.  The Germans have been lucky with their timing. One reason they left Spain after 2003 was an economic recession at home that dented their confidence, and made surging Spanish property prices look crazy in comparison to their own declining house prices. But they also deserve some of the credit for their cautious attitude to buying property abroad.  Germans don’t like borrowing money, unlike the British who will happily borrow more than 100%  They are always looking for a good investment but only something they can afford with cash. Rising prices just encouraged the British to borrow more.

The Germans are also shrewd buyers who instinctively go for good beach locations in places like The Balearics and The Canaries, where there is always strong demand from holiday makers. Many British investors, on the other hand, were easily persuaded that new developments in obscure parts of inland Spain, miles from the sea, would make a good investment.  Germans are fussy about quality and like to see what they are getting, so they found the off-plan boom a turn-off. Nonchalant British investors, on the other hand, piled into off-plan investment. By 2007, German buyers were just 10% of British demand, according to figures from the Property Register.

So what is starting to lure the Germans back? Prime property at reasonable prices. Prime property prices  are down by as much as 25% in the last few years. You can now buy apartments in good locations with sea views for around 350,000 to 400,000 Euros, down from 550,000, and villas are down to 1.5 million from above 2 million Euros. The crisis has created a window of opportunity that the Germans are exploiting. They are after the best properties, in the best locations, with the best views, for the best price. If the price isn’t right, they won’t buy.

Though there is little evidence that Germans are buying outside of their usual haunts, you could argue that this is the best time in years to buy property in other popular destinations around Spain and Tenerife. For a start there is a glut of brand new, key in hand properties languishing on the market, so investors are spoilt for choice.

In Tenerife, prime property with sea views is selling quickly if the price is right, showing that the market is far from dead. There are lot of enquiries for villas between 1 and 1.5 million euros, and anything really good in that range – private, with sea views – gets snapped up.

Of course prices may continue falling, but it would be foolish to expect prime properties to be given away.British people making offers 50% below asking prices are going home empty handed. Sellers are still open to offers, and it’s far easier to negotiate with them just before prices start rising than just after.

The big problem for British buyers right now is the weak Pound. There are ways to mitigate this, such as forex option contracts or taking out a mortgage (if you can), but there is no escaping the fact that British buyers with Pounds do not benefit from lower prices as much as German and other buyers with Euros.

The British may have dominated the mass market during the boom, but today there are plenty of other Europeans interested in prime property now that prices are coming down. So Spain may be in the middle of a massive real estate crash, but it could be a mistake to think that prices for the desirable properties in good locations will go down much further. Warren Buffett famously said that he tries to be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy. Right now British property investors are fearful, but German buyers are showing signs of an appetite. If we have anything to learn from the Germans it is that the time to buy property is during the bust, not the boom. Maybe it is time to take the plunge and return to the buying pool?