Dark Clouds Gather Over Spain’s Real Estate Market as Housing Sales Fall by 21% in August

14 October 2019 Market watchers have been issuing warnings recently regarding a potential slowdown in Spain’s residential real estate market. After years of rapid growth, and after prices have reached new heights due to constrained supply, talk has turned to a moderation in growth or even some level of stagnation.

Last week, the country’s National Institute of Statistics (INE) released data on the sale of homes in August that seemed to confirm such fears. A total of 35,371 housing sales occurred in Spain in the month, the lowest figure since August 2015. The retrenchment affected both the sales of new (-21%) and existing homes (-21.1%), the latter of which accounts for approximately eight out of every ten sales. Monthly sales took a bigger hit, falling by 26.1% from July to August, the biggest decline for that month of the last five years.

Original Story: El Mundo – Marcos Iriarte

Adaptation/Translation: Richard D. K. Turner

New Construction Permits Soar on Malagan Coast

18 April  2019 – La Opinión de Málaga

New construction permits soared by 655% on Spain’s Costa del Sol over the past four years, reaching a high of 9,195 new construction permits in 2018, according to data compiled by Sonneil, a real estate brokerage, using figures from the Ministry of Development. To the north, the issuance of new construction permits rose by 31% y-o-y in Alicante to 6,331, an increase of 166% compared to 2014.

Acquisitions by international buyers boosted growth in both coastal cities. In 2018, Alicante and Tenerife marked a sales record for international clients with a percentage of home purchases of 41% and 38% respectively, followed by the Balearic Islands with 31% and Malaga with 28%. Foreigners buyers accounted for 28% of the total in Málaga and 41% in Alicante. 80% of the acquisitions by foreign buyers were for second-hand housing.

Original Story: La Opinión de Málaga

Translation/Summary: Richard D. Turner

Valencia, in Search of Land for Construction

21 August 2018

The lack of available land is the reason that only 2% of the acquisitions of homes are for new housing in Spain’s third biggest city by population.

Valencia is after new land to re-energise its real estate market. With stable prices and an increasing number of transactions, the absence of new buildings is palpable in the statistics for the first quarter of this year, when just 2.3% of purchases (a total of 2,658) were for newly-built homes.

With a population that has been relatively stable in recent years, around 790,000 inhabitants, the city of Turia has doubled the number homes sold in the city since 2013, from 4,922 operations that year to 10,973 last year.

This has not yet pushed up prices, but it has been the basis for recovery. After the harsh effects of the crisis (apartments are 45% cheaper today than in 2007), housing prices reached 1,235.60 euros per square meter in the first quarter of this year, according to data on bank valuations at the Ministry of Public Works.

In homes less than five years old, the average price rose to 1,536.90 euros in the first quarter, while in second-hand homes, the investment needed to acquire a home fell to 1,233.70 euros per square meter.

The absence of development ready lands is a fact for the Spanish city’s real estate developers. According to a report by CBRE, the city is currently in the midst of desvloping and marketing sixty new construction projects, and it is expected that twenty more will be put on the market by the end of the year. Companies such as Neinor, Aelca and Aedas have housing developments in neighbourhoods such as Quatre Carreres, Patraix, Nou Campanar and Malilla Norte.

However, the high demand will cause prices to rise if more land is not made available, according to the consultancy. Metrovacesa’s project for the development of Benimaclet could be one of the most outstanding in this regard in Valencia. The real estate company controlled by Santander and BBVA is pushing for an agreement to present to Valencia City Council a project to build 1,500 homes in partnership with the local developer Urben.

Vía Célere is another of the developers active in the city: the company will build 22 homes in the Pechina neighbourhood, next to the Turia gardens. Aedas Homes is more advanced: the Spanish developer has sold another 120 homes in Turia’s capital through its Torres project, a residential complex that will be composed of two 16-floor apartment blocks. Aedas also has 252 flats in Valencia.

Residential prices in Valencia are now 45% lower than before the start of the crisis, but the city has great appeal, and the activity of private operators has been intense. Attikos is another local developer that has carried out work in the city, with the purchase of 1.9 million euros of development-ready land, where it will build 27 houses.

Offices on the rise

With a total of 63,480 companies, 88.2% of which are in the service industry, the office market in Valencia saw record allocations last year. According to a report by BNP Paribas Real Estate, the contracting amounted to 39,500 square meters in 2017, which caused a slight upward trend in rental prices, which are close to 14.5 euros per square meter in the city centre.

“Since the end of 2013, the last year of economic recession, demand has been positive,” the consultancy noted. “The good pace of allocations in recent years, together with the lack of new projects, are generating a considerable adjustment in the vacancy rate of the Valencian market which, fell to 10.4% at the end of 2017, out of a total stock of 774,000 square meters. This means that there are currently 80,546 square meters of available offices on the market,” they added.

One of the most notable operations in recent months was the rental of the former headquarters of CAM, leased by Solvia to the architectural firm Join Contract. The property’s new tenant will remodel it to transform it into a luxury hotel.

Original Story: EjePrime – C. De Angelis

Translation: Richard Turner

 

The Basque Real Estate Market Has its Best Semester Since 2010

8 August 2018

Housing sales rose by more than 7%, with 10,166 operations in the year to June, the highest level in eight years.

The Basque property market is continuing to gain rhythm as it traverses its fifth consecutive year of growth. Between January and June, more than 10,000 homes were sold in Euskadi (the Basque country), most of which were existing homes, the same as in the first half of 2010 and increasingly close to the 15,000 sold at the beginning of 2007. The economic improvement and the rebound in employment are stimulating demand and pushing up prices, softened in part by the low cost of credit.

Some experts are already warning of a potential new housing bubble like the one that caused the crisis to explode in 2007, even though the wounds from the last crisis have yet to fully heal. Last year, activity in the Basque construction sector grew again after nearly a decade of contraction, thanks to a recovery in housing construction. The sector is also seeing hopeful data regarding employment, which grew strongly in the second quarter of 2018 despite the slowdown in hiring in the Basque industrial sector.

The key to the maintaining the continuity of this virtuous cycle lies in the purchasing power of workers, especially young people. Salaries are the engine of the economy; hence the growth of the real estate market is linked to the progress of the economy in general. High prices, in this case, are a handicap that slows down the recovery of the sector. In this, the low cost of credit is a boon, which can encourage many families to take the plunge.

In the first half of 2018, 10,166 homes were sold in Euskadi, according to the INE’s data, the best result since the first half of 2010. Despite the slowdown in June, with a year-on-year decrease of 6.7%, operations grew by more than 7% in the first six months of the year. This would maintain last year’s pace and lay the foundations for a fifth consecutive year of growth.

The Basque real estate market bottomed out in 2013 when there were fewer than 11,000 transactions during the year as a whole – and just 6,300 between January and June. The trend changed in the second half of 2014, and the market began to see increasing signs of reactivation and consolidation in the following years. In 2017, just over 17,000 homes were sold in the Basque region, and the figure is expected to near 20,000 this year, practically double that of 2013, and not far from the record year of 2007, when 26,000 homes were sold.

The sale of new housing increases

Most of the sales have corresponded to existing housing. Around 80% of the transactions in the first half of the year involved previously existing homes. However, there has been a clear upward trend in the sales of newly built homes, which saw two consecutive monthly increases in May and June. For the semester as a whole, the sale of new flats increased by 10% compared to January-June 2017, higher than the average for real estate market in general.

On the other hand, although transactions involving existing homes do not directly affect the operations of the construction companies, those sales are also a reflection of the dynamism of the market and, although this is not always the case, a sign of an improvement in the perspectives and economic capacity of many families.

The acceleration of the real estate sector is supported by an increase in mortgage loans, which rose by 8% last year and continue to rise in the first half of 2018. The market is waiting to see the effect of the expected change in Euribor rates. Those rates fell below zero at the beginning of 2016, but have since started to rise again, albeit very slowly. For now, Euribor rates are still negative, generating savings for mortgage holders, but experts they agree that this will not be the case for long. The ECB hopes to put an end to the currently ultra-low interest environment, which would push Euribor upwards.

Although this factor can be a brake in the medium term, in reality at the moment, it serves as an important stimulus for the market. The fear that the cost of mortgages will increase, in many cases, leads to a decision to bring forward any planned purchases, to take advantage of the banks’ low rates.

The rise in sales has been particularly pronounced this year in Araba, where 450 homes more homes were sold more than in the first half of last year, reaching roughly 1,900 operations. Bizkaia (Biscay) recorded an increase of 300 homes compared to the first six months of last year, exceeding 5,200. In Gipuzkoa, whose capital has the most expensive flats of the three territories, there was a slight decline in the number of sales in the year to June, with just over 3,000.

In the whole of Spain, housing sales rose by almost 11% between January and June, according to INE data, which confirms that, in general, the Spanish market is somewhat more dynamic than the Basque market. In any case, the semester closed out with a smaller advance than the one in May, 13% than in April, above 15%.

Much of the slowdown was produced by the tepid data in June when sales in Spain rose by an anaemic 1.8% while avoiding the downturn in the Basque country. In April, the Spanish real estate market saw its best growth since the beginning of 2007, recording an increase in sales of 30%. The strong start to the year, therefore, gives some leeway for the type of retrenchment seen in June, and experts believe that growth will continue for the rest of the year.

Original Story: Deia – Adrián Legasa

Photo: Oskar M. Bernal

Translation: Richard Turner