Spanish rental property still tops

Spanish rental property still tops with the British

Overseas property buyers can get an idea of where they are likely to find a good rental market for their holiday home from a new survey that reveals Spain has been the top destination of 2011.

The quarter three Marketplace Report from holiday rentals specialists HomeAway also shows that there has been an increase in the rentals market in Thailand and Dubai.

More British people than ever opted for Spain as their top summer destination. In terms of the number of booking enquiries for breaks in the third quarter of the year Malaga Province and Majorca claimed first and second place, followed by Ibiza in sixth place.

There was also a clear preference towards short haul destinations with nine out of the top ten destinations for summer 2011 holidays being either in the UK, or within a three hour flight distance.

Source: PropertyCommunity.com

New brand created by tourist board to encourage Brits to buy a home

Costa del Sol brand designed to encourage Brits to buy homes.

The Tourist Board of the Costa del Sol has created the new brand ‘Living Costa del Sol’ with the aim of encouraging the British to buy a home and reside in the region for at least six months of the year, an initiative which is directed at clearing some of the surplus of about 30,000 homes.

The President of the organisation, Elias Bendodo, presented the brand at the World Travel Market tourism fair being held in London this week. He also told reporters that it is their intention that this initiative will also be used in promotional activities to be carried out in Germany, France and the Nordic countries.

According to Bendodo, ‘Living Costa del Sol’ was developed in collaboration with developers, insurance companies and financial institutions, and aims to attract new British residents, reduce the amount of unsold finished homes, located primarily in the west of the Spanish mainland, and boost Spain’s economic recovery.

The President of the Malaga organisation also assured that the developers are “fascinated with the idea”, and stressed the importance of having legal guarantees, for working with insurance companies in the countries to which the brand is focused, reported El Mundo.

Source: Kyero.com

INE say sales down in September

House sales down say INE

There were just 22,065 home sales in September (excluding social housing), 30.5pc down on the same month last year and 62pc down on September 2007, according to the latest figures from the National Institute of Statistics (INE).

Monthly sales this year since March have been the lowest since the crisis began. The positive start looks like a dead-cat-bounce. On a year-to-date basis sales in 2011 are 20pc below last year, and 56pc below 2007. The big question is can it get any worse in 2012?

Sales have been bad this year, falling by as much as 40pc in August, with an average annualised fall of 29pc each month since March. the market is shrinking fast, a clear sign that prices are still too high.

All this at a time when Spain is saddled with a monumental glut of homes for sale, not to mention unemployment of 22pc and rising. More than 40pc of young Spanish adults are out of work. Demographics are also starting to blow against the Spanish economy.

Unless the newly elected  Government takes radical steps to liberalise the economy, boost employment, and force banks to stop keeping property prices artificially high, it’s hard to see a way out of this mire.

What about holiday homes? The situation is a bit different because demand is internationally diversified, at least in some areas such as Tenerife. Some quality segments of the holiday home market will recover before the overall housing market. That said, this year and next year will be very tough.

Housing market shrinks again

Housing market shrinks again

Home sales in June were the lowest since the property crash began, show the latest figures from the Statistics Institute (INE).
There were 24,699 home sales in June (excluding social housing), down 26pc on the same time last year,  even June 2009, when the crash was thought to be at its nadir.  It is clear that, after a deceptively promising start, 2011  is turning out to be the worst year yet.
Compared to June 2007, sales were down 60pc – a teeth-jarring fall by any measure.
Year-to-date, transactions are down 11pc compared to last year, 3pc compared to 2009, and 55pc compared to 2007.
Assuming that prices have fallen by an average of 30pc since 2007, then in value terms (Euros) the market has shrunk by 70pc since then. That means 70pc less money around for everyone who lived off the housing market, town halls in particular.
All this helps explain why many town halls are now in the jaws of a financial crisis: They ramped up their spending and overheads during the boom, assuming it would last for ever, but now the money has dried up and they can’t afford to pay their bills. A 70pc fall in revenues from real estate helps explain why.
Why are transactions still falling? Partly because the credit crunch is still in full swing – in Spain at least – and partly because the abolition of mortgage tax relief at the end of last year brought forward sales that might otherwise have taken place in the first half of this year. So the figures might make the market look worse than it actually is. To find out we will have to wait and see if there is a recovery in the second half of the year, let’s hope it improves in Tenerife too.

Spain eases conditions for those with mortgage problems

Spanish mortgages problems may be eased?

Spain will ease conditions for people who can’t pay their mortgages as floating interest rates rise and unemployment remains the highest in the European Union, the government said on Thursday.

Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said the government will decree  a new and higher limit on the amount banks can legally deduct from the wages of a mortgage holder in default.

The government is contemplating other new rules to protect homeowners four years after a property bubble burst leaving many Spaniards stuck in homes worth much less than what they owe the bank.

“Indignados” or “indignant” protests around Spain in recent months have called on the government to address the plight of borrowers who can be evicted by the banks but still owe the entire amount of their mortgage even though the bank now owns their home.

Source: Reuters.com

Interest in foreign property purchase booming again says Moneycorp

Interest in purchasing Tenerife and Spanish property on the rise

Interest in foreign property purchases is once agan booming amongst British buyers, with  Rightmove and foreign exchange specialists MoneyCorp both reporting a large surge in enquiries. Real estate enquiries rose by 53 percent in February  Rightmove reports, with Spain retaining its popularity as a second home destination despite its much publicised housing collapse.

Certainly this increase in purchasing  is being seen in Tenerife and the bargains which exist at all levels, even in the prime property sector are now being snapped up by savvy purchasers

Increase in holiday home enquiries in Canary Islands

Interest in Tenerife property increases

Spring is finally in the air this week here in the chilly old British isles, and it seems UK holidaymakers have summer on their minds, if the latest data from vacation rental website Holiday Lettings is anything to go by. Surprisingly, despite growing media reports of an ‘income squeeze’ due to increasing taxes and inflation, the portal has recorded a 20% year on year increase in holiday home enquiries so far in 2011, with Spain’s Balearic and Canary Islands the big winners amongst sunseekers. 

This is good news for buy to let investors with properties in Spain’s outlying islands, who have no doubt been panicking over the last year with the market collapse on the mainland and virtually no chance of selling their home for a profit. But luckily industry predictions on the resilience of Spain as a holiday destination prompting a recovery in market demand appear to have come true – the Balearic Islands have had the single largest enquiry rate of any destination this year, whilst the Canaries were also popular earlier in the year.

The Canary Islands offer a value-for-money holiday option for cash-strapped Brits, particularly given the savings they could achieve on holiday rentals versus hotel stays. The recognised saving when renting a property is hitting home with consumers in tough economic times and Spain’s reputation for offering value for money and its longstanding place in the hearts of British holidaymakers are likely to be contributing to its popularity so far this year. Great news for property owners in Tenerife.

Launch of new ferry service from the UK to Spain

New ferry proviodes more choice to Spain from the UK

This Sunday sees the launch of cross-Channel ferry company Brittany Ferries’ second service from the UK to Spain. The company will offer twice-weekly services from Portsmouth to the scenic city of Bilbao on the Franco-Spanish border.

Brittany’s continuing expansion into Spain reflects the continuing demand from British tourists for holidays in the popular Mediterranean nation, which despite the economic downturn shows no signs of ceasing. The company found that particularly due to the constant disruptions in European air travel last year, more people are turning to the ferry as their method of choice to get to their Spanish holiday home.

“As the number of air travellers from the UK to Spain have declined, we’ve witnessed a surge in demand for direct UK Spain crossings”, said passenger commercial director Mike Bevens. “Bilbao has forged a reputation as a destination in its own right in recent years.”

Spain and the Canary Isles still the Brits favourite place to buy a home

Spain is still tops for Britons buying homes abroad

Spain is the perennial favourite for Britons looking to buy a home abroad, confirms the latest survey by Channel 4’s A Place in the Sun.

The ranking for 2011 goes as follows (2010 in brackets):

1. Spain (1)
2. France (3)                    
3. Portugal (4)
4. Italy (6)
5. Florida (2)
6. Turkey (5)
7. Greece (8)
8. Cyprus (7)
9. Malta (new entry)
10. Egypt (new entry)

Here is what they had to say about Spain, Tenerife and the Canary Islands:

Once again, Spain remains the most popular destination for Brits to buy abroad and therefore tops our chart of the best places to buy abroad in 2011. After all, it has all the right ingredients – excellent access from the UK, sun, sea, culture and infrastructure. With repossessed properties and distressed sales hitting the market, the home of the Costas, Balearic and Canary Islands still has some great deals for the diligent buyer. Huge discounts on holiday homes mean there’s a multitude of destinations and property options on offer.

As we have been saying for a while now, this really is a great time to buy in Tenerife. In fact it is a great time to buy throughout Spain and its islands.  Check out the latest deals with your estate agent, particularly the discounts available  on prime property in Tenerife.

Mixed news from the Spanish property market

Mixed signals regarding Spanish property market.

In the Spanish property market , official figures show prices falling, though not by as much as expected given Spain’s economic problems but annualised sales increased by almost 30pc in August.

Several sources report a recovery in sales starting at the end of 2009 and lasting the first half of this year, driven by the elimination of mortgage tax breaks in 2011, and the rise in VAT this year, both of which brought sales forward, plus low interest rates, and the effort banks are making to shift their stock of property.

Borja Mateo, a self-proclaimed real estate expert,  states why the recovery in sales might just be an illusion. According to Mateo, who has worked with Spanish banks for some years, the rising sales figures are just a reflection of the “enormous weakness of Spain’s banks and real estate market.”

The problem is that the official sales figures include what is known in Spain as ‘daciones en pago’, basically debt for property swaps (bank takes the property and cancels the debt). Mateo argues that banks are using swaps to avoid recognising losses they would face in foreclosure and selling at public auction. In bank swaps  they, not the market, get to decide the value of their own property portfolios. “If they were to recognise the real market value of their assets they would be very close to bankruptcy as the market value of their assets is far below the book value of their loans,” claims Mateo, who sees plenty of reasons to suspect the Bank of Spain is complicit in the cover up.

What is worse, banks are also keeping insolvent clients on life support with new loans to avoid having to recognise bad debts, claims Mateo. “The real level of the (banking) system’s bad debts is above 11%, the official rate is 5.5%,” he says. “Recognise real losses would put them (the banks) in a very, very difficult situation.”

Mateo forecasts that sales will fall significantly in the near future, thanks in part to end of mortgage interest tax breaks in 2011. Vendors are starting to give ground on asking prices again because “many people realise that if they don’t’ sell in 2010, sales will be much tougher in 2011.”

House prices and rents will continue falling in the coming years. It’s an unstoppable process,” he concludes.