Home construction in Spain to recover in 2013?

Construction in Spain and Tenerife set to improve in 2013

Home construction in Spain will begin to recover in 2013, according to the
Corporate Practise Institute.

The IPE’s Real Estate Pulsometer has predicted that the country’s inventory
of unsold will decline by 23.6 per cent this year, with up to 611,250 homes
being snapped up.

The report also notes an increasing trend for purchasing Spanish property
with cash, predicting that mortgages taken out will amount to just
one-third of the level seen in 2006.

However, while the market’s outlook is promising for the next 24 months,
“the report stresses that current construction activity has been reduced
to 20% of that achieved in 2007″,  Spanish rents rose by 0.7 per cent in April.

Figures from the National Statistics Institute showed that rental rates
increased compared to April 2011, with only two regions recording a
decrease in price: Murcia and La Rioja, where prices fell by 1.2 per cent
and 0.3 per cent respectively.

Rents increased by the highest amount in Catalonia, 1.4 per cent, followed
by Asturias and the Basque Country, where rates jumped by 1.2 per cent.
Rents rose by 1.1 per cent in Castilla y Leon and 1 per cent in Galicia.

Increases of less than 1% occurred in Andalusia (0.8%), Melilla (0.7%),
Ceuta (0.7%), the Canary Islands (0.6%), Extremadura (0.5%), Castilla-La
Mancha (0.5%), Cantabria (0.4%), Aragon (0.4%), the Balearic Islands
(0.4%), and Madrid (0.2%).

Source: Kyero

Monthly planning approvals at record lows

Monthly low for new builds in Spain and Tenerife

Monthly planning approvals for new homes are close to record lows, and might create a shortage in the next 5 years. There were just 4,600 planning approvals for new homes in February, down 44pc on the same month last year, according to the latest figures from the Government (Fomento).

Compared to February 2006, when Spain’s building boom was in full swing, planning approvals are down 93pc. That shows how badly the Spanish house building industry has been hit . From being the driver of Spain’s economy it has collapsed to almost nothing, which helps explain why unemployment is close to 25pc and heading for 30pc.

As a result of the collapse in planning approvals, there will clearly be a shortage of newly built homes in the next 3 to 5 years. This despite the fact that there is a glut of something like 750,000 newly built homes on the market today.

The problem is that many of those homes are typical of what gets built at the peak of a boom, badly built too quick, in undesirable locations with scant regard to what house buyers actually want. There is always a demand for new homes, that are properly built and well located. 

It is best to try to buy off-plan in the depths of the bust, not at the peak of the boom, though, most people do the opposite.

People  want  better designed, better built, more generously sized, more energy efficient, better located, and significantly cheaper homes than are on offer. As there are hardly any developers left standing,we are clearly going to see a shortage of such properties in Spain and Tenerife in the future.

Brits taking advantage of weak Spanish property market

Brits taking advantage of cheaper property in Spain and Tenerife

The volume of Brits taking advantage of the weak Spanish property market by purchasing homes continues to grow, new research shows.

According to latest figures from the National Statistics Institute, the number of British residents in the Balearics has risen by 75 in the past year bringing the official total to 23,773 people. The average age of this British contingent is now 46.6 years old.

Stephen Dight, managing director of Mallorca, and Ibiza, Sotheby’s International Realty, says: “The Balearics are a much more aspirational destination and, with higher property prices and lower supply of quality homes than mainland, attract a wealthier expat. Fluctuations in exchange rates lessening pension income or small percentage falls in property values are unlikely to affect our British Balearic expats and be a tipping point to force an exodus  they are simply not living on tight budgets.”

The largest in the Balearic archipelago, the Island of Mallorca features a host of popular beaches, villages and marinas, fertile agricultural plains, 26 golf courses, an impressive capital city and imposing mountain ranges, which partly explains why it attracts over 10m tourists each year.

Meanwhile the Canary Islands, particularly Tenerife are experiencing a similar upturn of interest in the top end coastal properties.

Sales of Spanish homes fell in February

Property sales on the slide in Tenerife and Spain

Sales of Spanish homes fell in February, the National Statistics Institute has announced.

The number of homes sold dropped by 31.8 per cent compared to the year before, with 30,745 properties sold across the month. Out of those, 53.5 per cent were for new homes. The figures mark 12 months of annual decreases in a row, following a drop of 26.3 per cent in January.

Indeed, agency Cinco Dias told Kyero that their sales of new homes fell by 26.5 per cent year-on-year in February with second home transactions decreasing by 37.1 per cent. This followed a monthly surge of sales in January of 42.3 per cent compared to December 2011.

While the national outlook looks grim, some areas remained popular with buyers, with the Balearic Islands and La Rioja seeing the highest number of transactions per 100k people

More wealthy Brits expected to move overseas

Wealthy Brits moving to Spain and Tenerife?

The volume of wealthy Britons who move overseas is expected to rise in the next two years, according to a new Lloyds TSB International Wealth survey. The study shows that 19% of people with savings and investments worth more than £250,000 are considering moving abroad, up from 17% six months ago and 14% a year ago. The new figure suggests that over half a million people with that level of personal wealth may flee overseas by 2014 in search of a better, more affordable lifestyle. Many of those seeking to leave the UK say that they would reconsider if Briton lowered taxes, cut regulatory red tape for businesses and improved public services such as healthcare, education and the police. Any hike in in the number of Brits moving overseas would undoubtedly fuel greater demand for homes abroad, with Spain, France, Portugal, Australia, and the USA often high on the agenda. Nicholas Boys Smith, director at Lloyds TSB International Wealth, said the number of people expected to leave the UK includes a “large number of successful, affluent individuals who play an important role in powering the UK economy”. He said: “While the figures strongly suggest we won’t see a mass exodus, it is clear that a significant and growing minority see opportunity and a better quality of life overseas.”

Average price of a home fell by 11.5% in March compared to last year

 

Property prices continue to slide in Tenerife and Spain

Vendors have been forced to slash property prices across the country in order to have any chance of realistically attracting a serious buyer, but with the well documented Spanish property crash showing no sign of abating, prices look set to fall further.

Despite claims from some estate agents and developers in Spain that market conditions are improving, it would seem that they are actually getting worse.

The average price of home in Spain fell by 11.5% in March compared to the corresponding month last year, according to Spain’s most widely-watched annualised House Price Index compiled by Tinsa, a leading property valuation firm. The annualised decline in Spanish property is the highest since the housing crash got underway over four years ago.

Spanish home prices have, on average, now dropped by 28.6% since the crisis started in December 2007 and by 35% along the coast, where the greatest glut of homes are located.

Advisory firm R.R. de Acuna & Asociados recently projected that the average price of a home in Spain will fall by 12%-14% this year – the most since the National Statistics Institute started tracking values in 2007.

Fernando Rodriguez de Acuna Martinez, a partner at the advisory company, said: “There will be more serious price drops this year because of the government decree.” What  could happen to prices beyond 2012? With unemployment standing at 23%, which is higher than Greece, and given that Spain is deep in a recession, with greater austerity measures to come, it would appear that prices still have a long way to fall.

Bankinter estimates that housing prices will fall an additional 6% to the end of 2013, but the reality is that the decline is likely to be greater and for longer.

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.

The biggest annualised fall in Spanish property prices since the crisis began

Average Spanish house prices fell 11.5pc in March compared to the same time last year, according to the latest data from Tinsa, one of Spain’s biggest appraisal companies.

House prices fall in Tenerife and the Canary Islands in Spain's slump

That represents the biggest fall in the index since the crisis began and since Tinsa started publishing this index.

Housing on the coast, where most holiday homes are located, fell 10,79pc, marginally less than the national average. Prices in the Balearics and the Canaries were down 9.71pc.

Peak (Dec. 2007) to present, average national prices have fallen 28.6pc and by 35pc on the coast, all according to the Tinsa Index.

More downbeat news for the Spanish housing market

More downbeat news on Tenerife and Spain's property market

Another clutch of downbeat news stories from the Spanish housing market: The value of house sales fell 37.5pc in 2011, according to new figures from the Government (Fomento). There were 307,931 home sales last year (excluding social housing), valued at 50.5 billion Euros, 37.5pc down on the year before.

More or less the same story, but from a different source, comes the news that there were 370,204 home sales last year (including social housing), according to the property register (registradores.org). That Spanish housing market is now the smallest it has been since the Property Register started publishing this data series back in 2005. Transactions fell 11pc in the last quarter of the year.

Source: Spanish Property Insight

Property purchasers in Spain should avoid cutting corners

Prospective property purchasers in Tenerife and Spain should avoid cutting corners

Potential buyers of  property in Spain have been warned to avoid cutting corners when purchasing a home or holiday apartment.  

Estate agents, lawyers and property developers who offer ways to save money and speed up the Spanish conveyancing system may lead to purchasers ending up with hugely expensive headaches later on, the British Embassy warned.

Despite the well-known problems facing thousands of past purchasers of property in Spain, the Embassy is aware that there are still property industry representatives who are trying to tempt future buyers with apparently attractive methods to secure their dream homes more quickly or cheaply.

Such offers may in fact be very bad value. “You should exercise extreme caution if an estate agent, promoter or lawyer urges you to cut corners to save money or time”, said Embassy property adviser Alex Brown.

“The Spanish property conveyancing system is different to the UK. When you choose an estate agent, promoter or lawyer to help with your purchase, check that they are qualified, reliable professionals and have significant experience of operating in Spain and expert knowledge of how the system works.”

Although the vast majority of British property owners enjoy life in Spain and have had no problems, thousands of British expats are facing some kind of legal problem with their homes, some because they were advised to cut corners during the purchasing process.

Many others are facing difficulties through no fault of their own, caught up in the complexities of Spanish planning regulations.

“There is a wealth of information on the Embassy’s UK in Spain website”, said Alex Brown. “We strongly urge people to check the advice in full, make sure they use fully qualified, reputable advisers throughout the purchase process, and avoid any kind of ‘dodgy deal’ that could end up costing huge amounts of heartache and hard-earned money later on.”

Source: EuroWeekly