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




A growing number of vendors trying to sell their homes are dropping their asking prices, according to new research by one of Spain’s leading property portals. Asking prices for 18,007 resale properties in the Idealista database were reduced in June, 30% more than same time last year, and the highest level for 2 years. The number of price reductions has been on the rise every month since January, causing the 12-month average trend to rise after falling for about a year. But if the number of discounted properties is growing, the average discount value is not. Discount values peaked at the beginning of last year and have been declining ever since, so it’s a story of more, but smaller discounts.



