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
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
April 6th, 2009 — 11:23am
Construction projects in Bulgaria exceeding 2,5 billion Euros have been put on hold because of the recession. There are a few large projects, which do not have problems with financing. The fear of bankruptcy and the lack of free money is the reason for the investors to give up their plans for big projects and to sell their business. Some developers are prepared to sell parts of their future developments at lower price just to be able to finish their projects. On 2 April 2009 they met with Russian investors at a business meeting organised in the Russian capital Moscow. There were different projects on offer – holiday homes, residential homes, power plants, regulated and unregulated land, concrete buildings and whole residential areas. However the accent was on holiday homes and golf courses throughout Bulgaria.
Apart from the Russians the other type of investors interested in Bulgaria are those from the Middle East. Some of them are prepared to put on hold their projects in their home countries in order to buy at low prices attractive projects in Europe and in the USA.
Comment » | Bulgaria, Property
March 24th, 2009 — 10:45am
Russians started buying apartments in Bulgaria in bulks of 300. They buy everything at prices ranging from 300 Euros to expensive attic apartments at 2000 Euros per sq m. The Russians are attracted by the drop of prices in Bulgaria which exceeds 20% in comparison with last year. “We buy properties in bulk!” is written on billboards on the streets in Sofia and in the Bulgarian Black Sea resorts. Many Russians have decided to invest heavily in property in Bulgaria in an attempt to protect their savings in the climate of uncertainty about the future of the major Russian banks. At the same time this is badly needed influx of fresh money on the Bulgarian property market.
Comment » | Bulgaria, Property
March 10th, 2009 — 10:39am
In 2008 in Bulgaria the number of purchases of property was 309 788 which was 4.79 % less than in 2007 when their number was 325 385.
The direct foreign investment in property in Bulgaria in the first nine months of 2008 amounted to 1190.5 million Euros which is a decrease of 33.34% in comparison to 2007. At the same time the direct foreign investment in construction in the same period showed a decrease of 27.99% and amounted to 405.2 million Euros.
The average property price increase in Bulgaria for 2008 was 14.88% due to the expansion of the construction industry in the first half of the year unlike the stalemate of the last months. The average increase of the rent was 4.74%. Most of the buyers in 2008 were Bulgarians and Russians. The average monthly yield in 2008 was 6.34% which is about the average for Europe. In Sofia it was 5.89%, in the second largest Bulgarian city Varna it was 4.97%, while in Plovdiv, the third city it was 4.86%.
The average mortgage in February was 36 100 Euros. Mostly people who have savings able to cover 40% of the price of the property take mortgages at the moment. In Sofia the average mortgage was 45 200 Euros, in Varna – 36 140 Euros, and in Plovdiv – 25 400 Euros. Nobody takes mortgages exceeding
70 000 Euros at the moment and the banks do not lend mortgage which cover 80% or 90% of the price of the property.
Comment » | Bulgaria, Property