Tag: buyers


Bulgarian Property Market 2009

January 25th, 2010 — 3:59pm

Almost 28% is the decrease in the number of deals on the property market in Bulgaria annually. This number is different in the different parts of the country but only Sofia and Varna have similar statistics. 72% of those who would like to buy a property in Sofia and Varna are prepared to pay not more than 40 000 Euros. In Plovdiv and Bourgas the buyers are prepared to pay not more than 25 000 Euros.

In 2009, 42% of the buyers paid in cash and 37% of the sellers had financial difficulties, not necessary inability to pay their mortgages or bad credits. In 2009 most of the buyers bought newly built properties and only 12 % of them have bought prefabricated apartments. The most active buyers were between 26 and 35 years of age.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Prices of Luxury Property

October 29th, 2009 — 12:11pm

In the last months the highest price of a property purchase in Sofia was 3000 Euros per sq m. This is half of the top prices paid for luxury properties two years ago.  The owners of expensive properties sell them now for two reasons – some experience financial difficulties, others think that with the money from the sale they will make a better investment.  According to the statistics the owners with financial difficulties are only 17% of the sellers and all of them are keen on dropping the price of their property.

Buyers ready to spend about 500 000 Euros are rare and they have a very good choice at the moment. The advertised prices of luxury properties are up to 200 000 Euros for apartments and about 600 000 Euros for houses in the affluent areas of Sofia. The actual purchases are carried out at much lower prices.  Buyers are prepared to pay between 120 000 and 150 000 Euros for a luxury apartment and about 500 000 Euros for a house. At the moment properties offered at prices exceeding 1 million Euros can not be sold as prospective buyers very rarely view them.

Only 12% of the buyers of luxury properties actually buy with the intention to make this property their home. 53% of them think that this is the right time to make a long term profitable investment. The rest have different reasons for buying like increasing the number of children in the family or achieving higher social standing.

According to estate agents the recession on the market of luxury properties came with a delay of about three months, possibly due to the optimism of the people with money. Then it crushed. The property market’s stability of the last months is less likely to cause price increase. This is not good news of owners of luxury properties as they expect to sell within a time limit. The reason for this is that more than 90% of the luxury properties are sold furnished and the furnishing loses its value in time thus affecting the price of the property.

The location of the property continues to be a key factor in the choice of property. The most popular affluent parts of Sofia are still the Doctors’ Garden, Lozenets, the luxury enclaves along Bulgaria Boulevard and the outskirts of Sofia in the south, right in the foot of Vitosha Mountain.

Analysts believe that once the recession is over, the luxury properties will increase in price faster than the other types of property.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

British sunseekers flock back to Spain and France in search of bargain holiday homes

September 28th, 2009 — 10:52am

By Kevin Rose, The Independent

As property prices fall across Europe, the chance of owning a holiday home abroad may never be better. And with sterling struggling against foreign currencies – touching a six-month low against the euro on Thursday – it may be wise to get moving sooner rather than later. But where are the bargains?

Latest figures suggest that old favourites France and Spain are regaining their popularity with buyers of holiday homes. But the picture is not so positive for investors wanting a sizeable return on their purchases, with some former European hotspots now looking decidedly chilly.

According to overseas mortgage firm Conti, 31 per cent of the enquiries it has received so far this year have been about property in France, while more than a fifth were about Spain. Clare Nessling, director at Conti, says buyers are sticking to areas they know and trust, and turning their backs on more adventurous territories such as Bulgaria, Turkey and Dubai.

Spain is maintaining its popularity with UK holiday home buyers as prices have fallen heavily due to an oversupply of properties on the market. In some cases, prices in the Costa del Sol have plummeted by 40 per cent since the peak in 2006/7.

That means for those who have always dreamed of buying a place in the sun but been put off by the cost, now is the time to take a look.

The glut of properties on the Spanish market has led one UK firm to launch a service specifically to try and find buyers for “distressed” properties, typically repossessions, probate or part-exchanged properties.

The online property company, whitehotproperty.co.uk, is currently marketing around 4,000 distressed properties in the popular tourist destinations with – in some cases – sizeable discounts. In one example, a four-bed, two-bathroom duplex apartment in Torrevieja has been reduced to €118.400 (£102,068), a 27 per cent discount on the original asking price.

Similarly, a three-bedroom villa with a pool in a tourist hotspot such as the Costas can be bought for €400,000. It would have cost around €650,000 at the height of the market three years ago.

Stuart Law, chief executive of international property investment firm Assetz, puts the British homebuyers’ continued interest in Spain down to its proximity to the UK, its sunny climate and an abundance of sandy beaches.

The addition of relatively low property prices means Brits are in a good position to buy in Spain – so long as they don’t expect investor-grade price rises. With supply outstripping demand, the situation is unattractive to the professional property developer reliant on solid returns over a relatively short period.

Law says: “Spain is a very difficult place to be buying from an investment point of view, particularly if you are keen on covering all of your costs with rent. Oversupply is impacting the rental market and the exchange rate isn’t helping.

“If someone has set their mind on a holiday home that they are not going to rent out then Spain is ideal, and the very problem that would cause an issue to an investor is what is helping push prices down. There is massive choice, and also some very good pricing.”

However, although Spain may have plenty of appeal, the European continental property market as a whole has not yet recovered. The Netherlands, Denmark, Slovenia and Slovakia have all seen double-digit house price falls over the second quarter of the year.

But the leading horror story is Bulgaria. The former hotspot in the Balkans is now a no-go area for lenders and buyers alike, with its land registry data showing that real estate transactions crashed by 35 per cent year-on-year in the first half of 2009.

Land prices in the previously fashionable Black Sea area fell by an average of 40 per cent in the first eight months of 2009 compared to the same period in 2008, according to the International Real Estate Federation in Bulgaria. All of Bulgaria’s major cities and seaside resorts, including Sofia, Varna and Samokov, as well as winter resort Borovets, reported falls in the region of 50 per cent over the same period.

Stuart Law cautions Brits to avoid Bulgaria at all costs. He says: “It’s just horrific; where is the bottom of the market? Our question has always been ‘why would you bother?’ There are so many better places, either closer, nicer or just as cheap. Comparing Spain to Bulgaria… there really isn’t any choice. Spain ticks almost every box and is much closer and easier?”

He suggests that if potential holiday homebuyers want to go further afield, they should consider the US, where some bargains can be found. “Anybody who has ever aspired to own a holiday home in Florida and hasn’t looked recently is going to be genuinely shocked by what they could get. We’ve seen Orlando townhouses in prime resorts at €50,000-€70,000.”

One reason that many are avoiding Europe at the moment is the state of the pound. Over the past two years there has been unprecedented volatility in the currency markets, with the value of sterling fluctuating by over 30 per cent against the euro. The pound currently buys around €1.1, with many currency analysts predicting that parity will occur very soon.

Stephen Hughes, a director of Foreign Currency Direct, fears that sterling is “collapsing”. He argues that currency traders are agreeing on one thing: “sterling is likely to fall fast and far.”

With further falls probable, what should existing or potential European homebuyers do to protect themselves? Mark Bodega, a director at currency broker HiFX, recommends that people looking to buy abroad should consider a “forward contact”. “This allows you to buy currency now and pay for it later,” he explains. “You will need to pay a 10 per cent deposit now and the 90 per cent balance upon the maturity of the contract, but it allows clients to lock into an exchange rate for up to a year.”

Julian Cunningham, from international estate agents Knight Frank, advises British sellers on the continent to reduce their asking prices. He says: “The savvy vendor is passing on any currency gain to the potential buyer in the form of a reduced asking price. But without passing on a certain percentage of that gain to the potential purchaser, it makes it a lot more difficult to do the deal.”

Holiday home heaven: Why France remains number one

It’s not difficult to see why France remains the most popular choice for Brits. Easily accessible by road, rail and air, potential buyers are not solely at the mercy of budget airlines. House prices have remained resilient in France compared to the UK, and mortgage funding is largely more attractive, too.

Nessling says: “In France, lenders have always been a little more cautious. They certainly haven’t taken the extreme view that most UK lenders did. Throughout the credit crunch we’ve still been able to get 100 per cent mortgages in France for loans over €250,000.”

More than four-fifths of mortgages in France are fixed and the majority of all new mortgages are fixed for at least one year. This lending strategy is another reason why the French property market is, on the whole, performing better than in Britain.

Despite a period of house-price falls in the country last year, prices in France actually increased by 3.9 per cent in the second quarter of this year, according to the French National Association of Real Estate Agents.

Stuart Law, chief executive of international property investment firm Assetz, agrees that mortgage lenders in France have kept their criteria largely unchanged, arguing that because they lend based on affordability, an unsustainable boom in prices in France has been prevented. He says: “In the South of France prices have barely wobbled as banks do not think they have substantial risk there.”

1 comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Bulgaria to yank cash out of property deals

August 21st, 2009 — 10:26am

Dnevnik Daily

A new public institution will be set up in Bulgaria to manage and control amounts from all real estate transactions in an effort to bring them into the light and crack down on money laundering in the industry.

The new Deposit and Consignation Fund will be inaugurated by special legislation hammered out by the Ministry of Justice and the Notary Chamber.

The institution will be a state-owned enterprise and not a bank and will be modelled on a system already operational in France, said Notary Chamber head Dimitar Tanev. Under the scheme, the sellers will receive their money with a short delay but it will ensure transparency and security to all loyal parties as well as central and local authorities.

The system will see buyers transfer the money into the fund where it will spent two or three weeks before it is passed on the seller. The period will be used to check up the resource’ origin and charge all dues of the government and municipalities. It is expected to put an end to sham transactions and block cash payment as money will have to be put into the fund by a bank transfer, Tanev explained.

Market values in the different regions will be determined by experts and updated every three or four months. The price will serve as a reference point for actual property transactions to make sure money laundering and tax evasion is prevented. A difference within 10-15% could be assumed thanks to property improvements but current differences topping out at between 300% and 1000% will be impossible, Tanev said.

The Notary Chamber discussed the proposal with representatives of the European anti-fraud office OLAF, who said the project will indicate the country’s commitment to combat abuse and money laundering.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Legal, Property

Bulgarian Property Market

August 4th, 2009 — 11:13am

The number of purchases of property in Bulgaria has decreased sharply according to analysts. In the first six months of 2009 in comparison with the same period of last year the number of property purchases has decreased on average by 42% for the country as a whole and by 58% for the capital Sofia, based on the information provided by the National Statistics Institute. The volumes of the current market are similar to the ones in 2005.

The tendencies which started in the last quarter of 2008 continued and even deepened in the first half of 2009.  The buyers are currently waiting to see which way the market will go.  Only those who can see a long-term profit risk  buy now. Apart from the planned expansion of the big retail chains which started in the beginning of 2009, there has not been a single purchase of land for a big project.  The prices of apartments have dropped by 9,7 % only in the first quarter of this year according to the National Statistics Institute. The average price for the country in the second quarter of 2009 is 1074,98 levs/sq m. The highest property prices are in Varna – 1827 levs/sq m, followed by Sofia – 1745 levs/sq m and Burgas – 1471,67 levs/sq m. The lowest price is in Kiustendil – 540, 85 levs/sq m.

The purchase prices of properties drop faster than the rents and returns are becoming higher. The reason for this is  on the one hand the crisis in finding financing for a property purchase and on the other the fact that many prospective buyers stay as tenants and thus keep rents high.

The annual return of an apartment in Sofia in the first half of 2009 was 4,5% while in the last half of 2008 it was 4,1 %.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

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