Tag: profitability


The overseas property dream that continues to end in nightmares

June 1st, 2009 — 12:21pm

Jessie Hewitson, The Observer

Back in 2006, Andrew and Pat Pryce decided to buy an investment property in Bulgaria. With retirement looming, they were hoping for rental income to supplement their pension, and a flat they could eventually sell on at a profit. When they read on the internet about the Mechi Chal mountain lodge in Pamporovo, advertised by overseas property agent Someplace Else as “the most exclusive in Bulgaria’s booming ski resorts” and offering a guaranteed rental yield of 7% a year for the first three years, they put down a deposit of £19,485.

It was a year later, in 2007, that they had the first inkling that something might be wrong. No one was asking them for more money, and there seemed to be no evidence that building was taking place. By 2008, they were so concerned with the lack of progress that they went to Bulgaria and drove around Pamporovo to investigate for themselves.

“We couldn’t see any sign of the development,” says Andrew. “On a second visit we attempted to locate the agency’s Bulgarian office in Plovdiv, but found it inhabited by another company.”

Having lost faith that the development would ever be built, the Pryces asked for their deposit to be returned. They say Someplace Else agreed to this more than a year ago but, despite being promised the money on three occasions, they have received only £2,000. They have now consulted a lawyer.

The Pryces are not alone. Since January 2008, the Association of International Property Professionals (AIPP) – a voluntary organisation with 376 members – has received 116 formal complaints from buyers unhappy about purchases abroad.

The number of people who have lost money in projects around the world is likely to be far higher than most realise, partly because nobody is keeping a record, and partly because those who have lost money are too embarrassed – and upset – to talk about it.

John Howell, senior partner in the International Law Partnership, specialising in overseas property purchases, estimates that 20% of those who have bought off-plan in the past two years are likely to run into “significant difficulty”. According to AIPP estimates, in 2007 193,600 of us bought property in the 10 countries most favoured by British buyers. This means more than 38,000 may be in hot water from just a single year’s overseas property purchases – and some may not even realise it yet.

The collapse of Churchill Properties Overseas alone meant about 340 investors, mainly British and Irish, lost deposits worth an estimated £4m. The company, which sold property in Estonia, Cape Verde and Goa, went into “voluntary liquidation” last summer.

Out of pocket

Another high-profile company, Bulgarian Dreams, closed at the end of 2008 and is currently being investigated by the City of London Police economic crime department. It is impossible to know exactly how many of its investors – who have bought in more than 40 developments in the eastern European country – have been left out of pocket.

Some of the estimated 100-150 investors who, like the Pryces, bought off-plan apartments in the Mechi Chal lodge, are leaving desperate posts on property forums and seeking legal action to get their money back.

Ben Mason, a partner of Someplace Else, says the delays have been caused by the local water authority rescinding permission it had previously granted. He is hoping to get it reinstated. “Providing this happens in the next two months, we can get the first phase finished by December this year and the second phase completed by December next year,” he says.

Mason admits the development is hard to find, but claims that the foundations are in place for phase one, many of the houses have been built off-site and when they do get water permission, the Bulgarian office will reopen.

As for the Pryces’ deposit, he says: “Due to the current economic climate, it has taken us longer than we expected to make this refund from the UK … however, there is no question of the Pryces not receiving the balance of their deposit, with interest, over the next few weeks.”

Howell notes that the developers in trouble are not typically local but British would-be Donald Trumps, and new to the game. “Many of these developers probably started off with good intentions but soon got in over their heads,” he says. “Whether it was fraud or bad economic times is a moot point, frankly, because the end result is the same: people lose money.”

Bad lands

Derek Smythe (not his real name) is more than aware of his predicament, and resigned to losing the £30,000 he invested in 2006 into a company that promised to buy land in Montenegro, get planning permission, build and sell on.

“Since investing the money, I’ve had virtually no communication from the directors [both British],” he says. “There’s no evidence that the money was used to purchase any land at all – I have absolutely no idea what happened to it. It’s been pretty miserable – and the worst thing is, it’s all my fault as I didn’t ask enough questions.”

The sums of money being lost are vast: Howell recently met 70 people, mainly Britons, who had sunk an average of €80,000 (£70,000) into a troubled development in Bulgaria.

He also has clients who regret buying in Dubai. “The problem is that all the major building companies belong to the royal family, and you won’t find a lawyer who will sue.”

The range of people losing money this way spans class, gender and age: young, old, working class, middle class, the gullible, the naive and the greedy are all suffering alike.

“I’ve got clients who are working-class people who invested the £20,000 equity they had in their home, and high-flying professionals who frankly ought to have known better,” says Howell, adding that one client who got stung was a partner in a chartered accountancy firm.

Many of these problems would not have happened if the investors had sought the advice of a good lawyer – something that many of the people interviewed for this article bitterly regret not doing.

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

Property Market in Bulgarian – Analysis

May 20th, 2009 — 11:07am

Now is the best time to buy a property. the property prices have dropped significantly and there are no expectations for further decrease, according to large estate agencies. The average decrease of the prices in Sofia since the beginning of 2009 is 6%. The price drop is more significant – of up to 15% – in affluent areas where the prices have been unreasonably high during the property boom, like the Doctor’s Garden in Sofia, as well as in areas with bad infrastructure. By the end of the year prices will drop further by 5-6% but not more, say analysts. Even if there are further price reductions, buying property now will be profitable in the long run. Buyers can naturally wait a bit longer but it is not sure how much of their money will be eaten by the inflation.

The development of the property market in the next few months will depend on the economic recovery and on the job security of the buyers. According to bankers, many governments work toward the increase of the amount of cash in their countries so the increase of inflation is a normal consequence of the recession. As Bulgaria is in the conditions of a monetary board, the inflation is imported and it is a sign of the recovery. However, the recovery will not be felt before the middle of 2010. In this connection, prices will fall further but only of properties which are of lower quality or those belonging to developers who are now experiencing cash problems.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

Bulgaria – IMF Report

April 15th, 2009 — 5:14pm

According to the IMF report about Bulgaria, 3,5 billion BGN from the planned budget income will not be collected in 2009 due to the recession. This will mean automatic activation of the so-called 10% rule – shrinking of the expenses of all ministries and government agencies by 10% in order to achieve an annual budget with a small profit.

The current IMF mission in Bulgaria aims to establish the economic situation in the country. The most dramatic development is the inability to collect VAT to the value of about 3 billion BGN from the initially planned amounts. The most optimistic forecast of the National Revenue Agency is that the VAT collection will be 5% less than the planned for 2009 or an amount exceeding 110 million BGN, which still will be an increase of 6% in comparison to last year.

Generally, the tax collection might increase by 12% in comparison with last year.

Concerning the collection of Capital Gain Tax, the optimistic forecast underlines that 14% or 360 million BGN will not be collected. Still the collection of Capital Gain Tax will be 2% more than last year.

According to the IMF report, the decrease of income will force Bulgaria cut the budget expenses to the value of 1,7 billion BGN in 2009. The state expenses must be cut, as well as the salary increases, because the economic growth in 2009 will slow down to 1%.

The decrease of lending and of the foreign investment will lead to the shrinking of sales in the country. This in combination with the decrease of property prices and the possible increase of the number of bad debt might lead to shrinking of the economy and a negative GDP growth of – 3,5%, according to the pessimistic forecast of the IMF.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Economy

Office Rents

April 14th, 2009 — 11:00am

Sofia is in third place among the European capitals in terms of profitability of office space. A high quality office building can have a 10% annual return. Only the Russian capital Moscow (11.5%) and the Ukrainian capital Kiev (14%) are rating better than Sofia. The profitability of office space in the Bulgarian capital has increased by 3% or 300 points from its lowest position three years ago. The figures for Belgrade are similar – 10% – while for the other Balkan cities this ratio varies from 7% to 8.5%. Only offices in the Romanian capital Bucharest show higher annual return of 9.5%. The more developed markets of office space like Prague, Budapest and Warsaw have much lower levels of annual returns of 6.75 % – 7.75%.

The rent of office space in the Bulgarian capital has actually decreased by 6.85% in the last year and now is 17 EUR/sq.m. on average as it is linked to the decreasing prices of properties in general. There is similar decrease of office rent in Madrid, Dublin, Moscow, Kiev, Belgrade, Budapest, Warsaw and Bucharest. In the 15 older EU-member states the office rent has decreased by 4% on average.

Comment » | Bulgaria, Property

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