April 24th, 2009 — 5:00pm
The number of mortgages lent in the first two months of the year in Bulgaria is twenty times lower in comparison with the same time last year. In January and February last year the banks lent mortgages to the value of 355 million levs, in the same months of this year the same figure was 18 million levs. The positive effect of the limiting of the landing is that for the first time in two weeks there is a tendency for decreasing the interest rate, although not by all banks. This decrease is of 0.54% for the mortgages in levs and 0.36% for the mortgages in euros. The average mortgage interest at the moment is 9.95%.
However, leading bankers think that in a recession the sensible policy is not to drop the interest rate. They have warned the developers to forget about the Brits and the Irish who used to buy all the properties at the Black Sea resorts and to focus on the Bulgarian customers, in order to survive the recession. It is expected that the Bulgarian property market will suffer mostly in September and October of this year.
According to developers the state must support the construction industry and the property market by pressing the water and electricity suppliers to offer better services.
Comment » | Bulgaria
April 7th, 2009 — 10:05am
For the first time in four years there are clear signs that the interest towards holiday homes in Bulgaria has decreased. The major buyers on this market – the Irish and the English – have stopped buying. The estate agents now joke that the result of this crisis is exactly what the greens have been striving to achieve – there is no construction in the resorts whatsoever.
According to the analysts, the slump has come as a natural result of the wish of the developers to constantly increase the number of foreign buyers, taking advantage of the low prices. At the moment there are no buyers at all and many developers sell their properties well below their value. Those few developers who have free cash despite the recession do not want to invest in the overdeveloped Black Sea and mountain resorts. There the property prices have dropped so much that a studio costs as much as a new middle class car. Despite this, there are no buyers. The supply on the holiday property market is 80% higher than the demand. There are thousands of sellers and no buyers. There is no secondary market due to the low rental income.
40 000 Euros can buy you a furnished one bedroom apartment in Sunny Beach. Most buyers receive not only discounts but also fitted kitchens, furniture or at least laminated floor.
In Bansko the situation looks similar. A one bedroom apartment of 80 sq m, situated close to the gondola lift costs 38 000 Euros. Further away from the lift in the direction of the central parts of the town price fall and for 30 000 Euros investors can buy an apartment of 64 sq m. Completed furnished apartments sell for about 600 Euros per sq m.
Although the holiday homes market has reached new lows, the analysts believe that in long term there will be good prospects for its development. The recession itself has lead to to preservation of the nature and this will eventually attract new buyers and tourists. On the other hand the recession has brought new lower prices of materials and labour. Many companies which got involved in construction because of the high profits are now going bankrupt. The developers are becoming more careful and there are expectations that the new projects will be of much better quality and with better location.
Regardless of the fact that the British and Irish buyers have lost interest towards the Bulgarian market, the analysts expect that soon Russians, Poles and Scandinavians will start buying in great numbers in Bulgaria. However, they look for different products and it seems that what has been built for the British buyers will not satisfy them. The holiday apartment or house will be less important than the environment, the peace and quiet, and the services on offer.
Comment » | Bulgaria, Property
March 24th, 2009 — 10:27am
Last year 60% of the mortgage applications in Bulgaria have been made for the purchase of a second home, according to Bulgarian bankers. Bulgarians used to buy properties for investment, expecting high returns and constantly increasing property prices.
This year the number of the mortgage applications have decreased ten times. According to bank managers this is due to the different expectations of sellers and buyers. The buyers expect prices to go further down and do not rush to buy, while sellers do not drop the prices of their properties and wait for the market situation to change back to the time of the property boom.
The banks lend much less money than before and cover a much smaller proportion of the price of the properties. At the same time prospective buyers are unwilling to take large mortgages and prefer smaller ones. Most of the buyers now have savings but they still need to borrow some money to buy a property.
Leading bankers think that the lending will not go back to the levels during the property boom of the last two years. They expect that at the end of the recession the ratio of the savings to the size of the mortgage will be 50:50 and in the following new boom it will go to 30:70.
The Bulgarian bank managers expect that in the next 6 months two new types of clients will enter the property market. The first type are people with good incomes and substantial savings. Currently, in Bulgarian banks there are 110 000 savings accounts with amounts exceeding 30 000 levs (15 000 Euros) with 76 000 levs (38 000 Euros) on average per account, according to the official statistic of the Bulgarian National Bank. Obviously, these people wait for the right moment to invest.
The second type are people who are not covered by the official statistics. They either keep their money at home or have incomes from the grey economy. Such kind of customers usually apply for mortgages that cover 20% to 30% of the price of the property.
At the moment the mortgage interests of Bulgarian banks are between 8% and 10%. Nobody expects any change until the end of the year, as bankers wait for the first encouraging signals from the U.S.A and Europe, in order to make a move.
Comment » | Bulgaria
March 23rd, 2009 — 10:46am
Because of the recession many sellers drop the prices of their properties to be able to sell them. The number of prices of apartments in the big Bulgarian cities which are under 30 000 Euros have drastically increased in the first three months of this year. One of the reasons for this is the lack of buyers due to the strict rules of the bank for lending. A few months ago all Bulgarian banks stopped lending money for the purchase of apartment in prefabricated blocks from the communist era. After that the banks have sharply increased the mortgage interest rates and have decreased the size of the mortgages, thus have put off many prospective buyers. In reality the Bulgarian property market have moved back to the situation years ago of expensive mortgages.
In Plovdiv 70 apartments are on the market for prices under 30 000 Euros. Only 20 of them are off plan. Prefabricated apartments with total area exceeding 90 sq m are for sale for as little as 13 000 Euros.
In Varna the number of the apartments under 30 000 Euros is 60, the cheapest property is a one-bedroom apartment for 20 000 Euros in the outskirts of the city. There is ever an apartment in the central parts of Varna offered at 30 000 Euros, which is still at the off-plan stage. Prefabricated apartments sell for about 25 000 Euros in the outskirts of Varna.
In the second largest city on the Black Sea, Burgas, the number of apartments on offer are twice more than in Varna but most of them are off-plan and in the outskirts of the city. The cheapest offer, €15 120, is for an off-plan apartment with are of 41 sq m. There are ten prefabricated properties for sale at prices starting at 24 000 Euros. All of them are located in the outskirts of Burgas.
In Russe there are 20 apartments under 30 000 Euros. The cheapest offer is for a studio for 12 900 Euros. Prefabricated apartments start at 15 000 Euros.
While in the country at the moment prices range from 440 to 580 Euros per sq m, in the capital Sofia, the property prices have dropped everywhere, apart from the central parts of the city. The sharpest drop of prices is in the southern parts of the city where there are more unfinished buildings then anywhere else in the city. The prices of prefabricated apartments have fallen more than any other. While last year they used to sell for more than 1000 Euros per sq m, now they are on offer for under 750 Euros per sq. m. Newly finished properties are offered for 700 – 800 Euros sq m. Off-plan apartments are offered for 500 Euros per sq m. Some developers offer discounts of 20 % of the prices of their finished apartments in cases of payment in cash. Others who are stable financially offer 15 leasing schemes to their customers.
Comment » | Bulgaria, Property
January 15th, 2009 — 1:02pm
Due to the recession the banks have now offered higher interest rates for savings accounts which range from 6% to 10%. The most popular are fifteen day, one month and three month savings accounts because there is no loss of the interests.
With the increase of the savings accounts’ interests, the loan interest has also increased by 2% on average. Concerning mortgages, in the last months there has not been any increase due to the fact that customers are unwilling to take new mortgages. The interest rates remain 8% for the mortgages in Euros and 9,5% for the mortgages in levs.
Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy, News