Luxury property success in Spain

Luxury property selling well in Spain and Tenerife

A luxury Spanish property agency has reported its most successful ever quarter in the three month period from July to September.

Lucas Fox International Properties sold €19.5 million-worth of luxury Spanish real estate in 2011’s third quarter, its best performance since opening six years ago.

Lucas Fox sells properties in Barcelona, Costa Brava and Ibiza.

Alex Vaughan, Director of Lucas Fox, said that recent rich buyers continue to enter the market despite recent negative comments. Personally, I can’t wait for them to start selling luxury properties in Tenerife, that will hopefully inject much needed cash into the local economy

Source: OPP

Luxury property and prime real estate is bouncing back world wide

Luxury property in Tenerife and Spain on the rise again

International luxury real estate activity is bouncing back, according to a new report from property network Christie’s International Real Estate.

Over two-thirds of respondents to Christie’s State of the Market survey reported an increase in buyer activity for the first eight months of 2011.

And although 62.5% said that sellers are still unrealistic about pricing, the figure has fallen considerable since last year.

However chief executive Neil Palmer warned that lending challenges and a lack of quality housing in some areas is hamstringing further growth. Tenerife’s prime property is a prime example of the  way the sector is bouncing back.

Source: OPP.org.uk

Spain’s luxury housing market remains bouyant

Tenerife prime property holding price well once more

Spain’s luxury residential market is showing some resilience as Eastern European and non-mortgage buyers surge into the market, according to new research.

New reports from Lucas Fox International Properties show that the average prices in the areas remain way above the national average.

And as finance becomes less scarce the luxury market has shown more strength than others.

Russian buyers are particularly active in Barcelona according to marketing director Anthony Leaton.

Source: OPP.org.uk

Investors in Tenerife and Spain benefit from more rental opportunities

Rental opportunities in Tenerife increase

Investors interested in property in Spain could benefit from more rental opportunities as more Brits choose to holiday in Europe. 

According to a new study by Abta – The Travel Association, bookings to Spain have increased by 11 per cent compared to last year, showing that the destination is becoming more popular with holidaymakers.

Short breaks are also seeing more people travelling into the country, especially to Madrid, as economies around the world recover and capital has been freed up to boost overseas stays.

“During the recession, luxury holidays were substantially affected, but have now experienced a healthy comeback,” Abta said in a statement.

Source: International Business Times

Spain blocks Gaddafi plans to build luxury flats.

Spain blocks Gaddafi's attempts to build on Costa del Sol

Spain has blocked plans by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi to build nearly 2,000 luxury flats on a property he owns in the country’s southern Costa del Sol region, Foreign Ministry sources said Wednesday. The complex in Benahavis, in the Malaga province, would also have included a golf course and a congress centre. The project was blocked in order to prevent Gaddafi from profiting from it economically, the sources said. The measure was based on sanctions approved by the United Nations Security Council and by the European Union against the Libyan regime. Spain is investigating whether Gaddafi has other properties or financial assets in the country, the sources said. Gaddafi made a private visit to Malaga in December 2007. Source: Monsters and Critics

Property prices starting to rise in certain areas of Spain

Property prices on the rise in parts of Tenerife,Spain and the Canary Isles.

Property prices on the rise in parts of Tenerife,Spain and the Canary Isles.

Property prices are starting to rise in some parts of Spain, according to a new report from one of the country’s largest savings banks. These include the Canary Islands,Cantabria, the Basque region, Asturias and La Rioja, says the report.

The much awaited real estate recovery is underway in locations where there is no glut of property such as  the

‘House and land prices have touched bottom in some cases. The adjustment is almost over, if not already,’ said Eduard Mendiluce, head of Caixa Catalunya’s property division Procam.

Indeed the report points out that there are between 660,000 and 1,040,000 homes on the market. This represents between 2.6% and 4.1% of the country’s housing stock. They expect the glut to fall slightly to between 640,000 and 1,070,000 in 2010, down to between 2.5% to 4.2% of housing stock.

The Caixa Catalunya report estimates that there will be an annual demand of 220,000 homes between now and 2015, almost half the level of 300,000 to 450,000 estimated by developers. At this rate it could take five years for the market to digest the glut.

But there is more good news for the luxury end of the Spanish market with one  buyers agent  reporting that transactions in prime areas around Marbella were increasing as early as the first quarter of 2009. ‘Secondary areas lagged behind with the first green shoots only appearing about nine months later and the worst locations are still in total paralysis in 2010,’ she said.

Currently the typical person looking for property is a cash buyer, buying for their own use, with a medium to long-term perspective, not dependant on rental income and only interested in buying in prime locations, she explained.

‘And those that require a mortgage need a maximum of 50% relative to value. In other words, the right purchasing parameters are in place again. Spain’s property market managed very well without a mass market before the boom of the Noughties and will do so again, returning I hope to the stability and long-term growth that held for four decades but this time going for quality rather than quantity,’ she added.

She also points out the uselessness of official statistics. ‘The official Ministry of Housing figures, based on registered transaction prices and supposedly objective, are distorted by under declarations of the sale price in the past and only once we have had several years of full price declaration will this distortion be washed out of the system, while the oft-quoted TINSA stats are based on subjective market appraisals. Either way, they are unreliable and, therefore, are meaningless,’ she explained.
‘There is only way to get good information about what prices are doing in 2010 and that is to talk to someone who is actively involved in putting deals together right now. When I’m asked about price falls, if they have hit bottom or if they have further to go my reply is that it all depends and there is no one answer but it seems to me that there are two main factors influencing outcomes: location and how badly the seller wants to sell. I would say there is a shortage of top quality properties in the best locations at the right price level for 2010,’ added Wood.