Tag: banks


Bankrupting Hotels

June 10th, 2009 — 1:50pm

According to the State Agency for Tourism (DAT), three-four hotels go bankrupt every week in Bulgaria. They are unable to re-pay their mortgages. Many hotels are put for sale but there are no buyers and banks repossess them but it remains unclear if the banks will be able to sell them.

It seems that Bulgaria follows the road of Spain where the state buys the bankrupted hotels and demolishes them, in order to create parks.

According to the statistics, in the first half of the last year, 820 new hotels have opened on the Black Sea coast. As result of the construction boom the number of hotels and holiday properties is much higher than the number of  the tourists.  Many hotels can not sell all their beds and their owners suffer losses. All this makes it impossible for the hoteliers to repay their mortgages and other credits and go bankrupt.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Bulgaria is turning into a black hole for some Irish investors

May 21st, 2009 — 12:10pm

Jack Fagan, Irish Times

AROUND THIS time of year, the newspapers are generally packed with large ads for overseas real estate. That has been going on for over a decade but, in recent years, Bulgaria and other former Eastern Bloc countries have been particularly active in targeting Irish buyers who had a reputation for being big spenders during the Celtic Tiger years.

These overseas property ads are rarely, if ever, seen any more simply because Bulgaria’s real estate boom has turned to bust and Irish and UK buyers are fleeing due to rapidly falling values and the rising number of uncompleted developments.

Other former Eastern Bloc countries are suffering the same fate.

Bulgaria became a particular favourite for many Irish investors because holiday homes were frequently available at half, or even one-third, of the price of similar properties on the Costa del Sol. Attracted by unrealistic promises of exceptional returns, Irish investors had no hesitation in borrowing heavily to buy cheap buy-to-let homes.

Dublin mortgage agents say that, because of the refusal of Irish banks generally to fund property investments in Bulgaria, many purchasers released equity from their homes or Irish-based property investments. Others used hot money in the belief that the Revenue had enough on its plate in tracing second homes and investments in Spain, France, Portugal and other popular destinations without traipsing through the former Eastern Bloc.

“A great deal of the money invested in Bulgaria never appeared on the radar. It would be hard to trace,” says one of Dublin’s largest mortgage lenders.

Tom McGrath, a Dublin solicitor specialising in the overseas residential markets, says that a combination of naivety and greed led many Irish people to buy up to five properties in Bulgaria with the intention of “flipping” them on before they were completed to make a profit.

Any number of estate agents had recommended this as a fool-proof way of making money but the reality was different and they have been left “with properties that they do not want, cannot sell and cannot afford to complete on”.

The market in Bulgaria is over-supplied and pretty well on the floor. Real estate agencies say that at least one-third of the 2,200 foreign-owned holiday flats in Bansko – one of the country’s top ski towns – are on the block again, often at half price.

One media report has suggested that some Black Sea hotel owners have offered their debt-laden businesses for sale for €1 – grim news for tourism, Bulgaria’s top foreign investment sector.

The property market in Bulgaria, like Ireland, has had a hard landing. Construction firms have been laying off workers and, with bank borrowing getting more difficult, many developers are finding it increasingly hard to complete schemes.

McGrath says that promises of guaranteed rent from developers are often unfulfilled and these properties were overvalued in the first instance to take account of this arrangement.

Investment in the property sector, which accounted for 30 to 40 per cent of GNP in the past few years, brought an immediate profit, says local economist Tihomir Bezlov: “Real estate for Bulgaria was like oil and gold for other countries.”

The same could probably be said of Ireland but, unlike Bulgaria, there was never any suspicion here that the industry was being used to launder money from criminal proceeds.

Bulgaria’s authorities have admitted they cannot prove where the money that fed the boom came from. Could some of the proceeds of the Northern Bank robbery in Belfast in 2004 be in the Black Sea? There’s a thought.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Bulgarian Property Market – Summer Forecast

April 3rd, 2009 — 10:49am

The number of purchases of property in Bulgaria is expected to increase in the summer according to analysts. However, there will be no growth unlike the last two years due to the lack of fresh money and the stricter rules for lending of the Bulgarian banks. The prices of properties in Bulgaria are expected to decrease by further 15% by the end of the year.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Investment Funds

March 31st, 2009 — 11:58am

The investment funds will be able to buy properties on territory of EU-member-states, according to the draft amendments of the law for the investment funds suggested by the Committee for Financial Supervision. Until now these funds could invest only in Bulgaria. The other significant amendment is that the minimal capital will increase from 600 000 levs to 1 million levs. The funds will be able to cooperate and work together on large property project which they would not be able to do on their own. The requirement that the depository bank which holds the money of the fund should give credits to them shall be removed. Other amendments include the possibility for investment in bonds and futures issued with the aim to finance major infrastructural projects. The requirement to obligatory increase the initial capital in order to get the right to operate as a fund will be also removed.

The rules for terminating the license of the company. The fund will be able to request it and in such case it will continue to operate as a normal company not as an investment fund.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy

Bad Debt

March 26th, 2009 — 11:13am

The number of the personal and business bad debt has been steadily increasing for a second consecutive month according to the statistics of the Bulgarian National Bank. In the end of February 2009 the bad and restructured debt has reached 1.65 billion levs which is an increase of 314 million lev only in a month. This is 3,4% of all loans. In comparison last year this ratio was slightly above 2%. According to analysts this level is still not worrying as the overall condition of the Bulgarian bank system is rather stable. Companies which collect bad debt claim that their work has increased by 40% in the first two months of 2009. The level of the repayment of loans received by Bulgarian banks have decreased by 20%. The level of partial repayments has increased, while the level of total repayments have decreased. Job losses and the increase of the part-time employment are key factors for this.

In February 2009 the number of the delayed repayment has increased by 19% in comparison with January 2009 and for January 2009 the increase was 13% in comparison with December 2008.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy

Back to top