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Spain Real Estate News

What's really happening in the real estate world in Spain? The EOS Team are going to be keeping you up to date with everything that's happening from a market perspective.

13 arrested in real estate corruption case
Saturday, February 28, 2009

 MADRID - Spanish police arrested the mayor of a small town and 12 other people in a real estate fraud case involving home sales to foreigners.

The Interior Ministry says the Socialist mayor of Alcaucin in southern Malaga province allegedly accepted bribes to allow construction of homes in nonresidential areas.

The ministry said in a statement that those arrested Friday included real estate promoters, members of the mayor's family and two architects.

Corruption has become a major issue before regional elections Sunday in the Basque region and Galicia in the northwest.

One probe has implicated members of the conservative opposition Popular Party. The opposition has in turn accused the government of putting pressure on the judiciary.

Source: MSNBC



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Number of Britons visiting Spain falls by a fifth
Wednesday, February 25, 2009

There was a 20.5 per cent drop last month with 148,000 few visitors from the UK than for January the previous year.

Spanish hotel price reductions of around two per cent have done little to offset the effects of sterling's dive by almost a quarter to near parity with the euro.

Around 16 million tourists flocked from Briton to its bars and beaches in 2007, accounting for almost one in three of all visitors.

But there were around one million fewer last year, the decline starting in September when numbers were down five per cent and drops in subsequent months.

The latest figures released by Spain's ministry for industry, tourism and commerce represent the lowest number of foreigners visiting the country since records began 15 years ago.

A source said: "These are the worst figures we have had since we began taking records of the number of foreign visitors.

"The drop in British visitors is most significant, as they are traditionally bar far our largest market. The fall is due to the worsening economic situation in the UK and the fall in the value of the pound."

It is estimated that Spain lost one million British tourists in 2008 with many heading out of the Euro zone for countries such as Turkey and Egypt as an alternative.

Andalusia, Spain's southern region which includes the Costa del Sol, registered a massive 26.8 per cent drop in the number of January visitors from the UK.

The Canary Islands, traditionally popular with Brits seeking winter sun, registered 47,000 fewer holidaymakers from the UK, a drop of 17.5 per cent on the same month last year.

With the number of American, German, French and Italian tourists also down, the figures are potentially devastating for Spain, where around 11 per cent of the economy is dependent on tourism.

Source:  Telegraph



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Spain's biggest property firm sunk by £1bn office deal
Monday, February 23, 2009

The purchase of HSBC's tower in Canary Wharf - the biggest property deal in British history - has helped sink its Spanish buyer, Metrovacesa.

Owners of the beleaguered building company, the Sanahuja family, will hand control of the company to its creditor banks, including Santander, swapping a 55% stake in exchange for cancelling €2.1bn (£1.9bn) of debt claims.

Spain's biggest property firm said on Friday that it lost €738m last year, the biggest loss in its 90-year history, as the value of its holdings dived following the collapse of the real estate markets in Spain and the UK.

The purchase of the 42-storey tower in London's Docklands is seen as the peak of the real estate boom for Spanish businesses, which saw a succession of firms launch themselves into an unprecedented debt-fuelled expansion spree. At the peak of the market, 800,000 homes a year were being built in Spain - more than France, Germany and Britain put together.

The Madrid-based Metrovacesa bought the 100,000 sq metre tower in Canary Wharf for £1.09bn in May 2007, financed with a £810m loan that it could not pay off or refinance as credit markets tightened.

Like buyout firms such as Baugur, which have also found themselves in trouble, Metrovacesa counted on rising values and cheap debt. The recession, however, has seen valuations go into reverse, while the credit crunch has dried up funds.

The Spanish company sold the tower - 8 Canada Square - back to HSBC last December for £838m, leading to a £250m gain for HSBC and a loss for Metrovacesa.

The real estate collapse has exacerbated Spain's plunge into recession because the sector accounts, directly and indirectly, for about a quarter of the economy. Thousands of firms are going bust and even top football clubs such as Valencia can no longer afford to pay their star players.

The former Valencia chairman and real estate entrepreneur Juan Soler raised the club's debt to more than €400m and started building a new stadium before it had sold the land occupied by its current Mestalla stadium, which it has still not managed to do because of plunging property prices and the credit crunch. Work on the new stadium has stalled while the club rushes to get a new financing deal with new lenders. A local savings bank, Bancaja, has already cut off credit.

London's commercial property prices have fallen 27% since the credit crunch hit. The latest blow to Canary Wharf came late last month when Morgan Stanley quit its lease of six floors of office space 10 years earlier than planned.

Source: Guardian



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At last, realistic Spanish property trends
Friday, February 20, 2009

At last, we have access to a set of numbers about the Spanish property market which are worth taking seriously.

Regular readers will know that the Spanish Ministry of Housing figures are laughable - not just because they still show property values increasing - but because their average house prices are calculated using mortgage valuations.

Last year, the National Institute of Statistics stepped-in with their own house price index - only to find that their figures also showed property prices in Spain increasing. Their figures are based on the actual notarised values of property transactions - which are heavily skewed by the amount of cash that changes hands 'under the table'.

Read the rest of the article at Kyero.com >>



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Spain banks take property risk to avoid bad loans
Wednesday, February 18, 2009

By Andres Gonzalez and Judy MacInnes

MADRID (Reuters) - Spanish banks are returning to property ownership to avoid loading more bad loans on to their balance sheets but the strategy is risky and unlikely to be as profitable as their real estate buying spree 15 years ago.

Spain's eight biggest banks last year formed or resurrected property wings that have bought up 7.8 billion euros (6.9 billion pounds) worth of property from struggling home-owners and developers.

"The banks are taking on a huge number of assets .... and they are now having to strengthen their real estate units to manage this avalanche," said Fortis analyst Emilio Rotondo.

The main threat to Spanish banks has come not from the toxic U.S. mortgage debt that has poisoned U.S. and British institutions, but a rapidly deepening recession propelling their bad loan rate to an expected 7 percent this year and 9 percent in 2010 from 2.8 percent last October, according to the Bank of Spain.

Mindful of the need to keep bad loans to a minimum, bankers are doing everything to stop another major developer filing for administration as Spain's biggest house builder Martinsa Fadesa did last summer.

Not only will creditors likely take years to recover debts from Martinsa but the default also ramped up non-performing loan NPL.L rates as they provisioned 25 percent of the loan, or 250 million euros in the case of No.2 savings bank Caja Madrid.

"By buying real estate assets the banks stop loans becoming bad loans. In so doing, the client's debt with the bank is cancelled and they avoid not only increasing bad loans, but they also avoid having to make more provisions," said Nuria Alvarez, an analyst at Madrid brokerage Renta 4.

Banks owned large chunks of the industry after the 1993-95 recession before making up to seven times their original investment by selling them on in the 1997-2007 property bubble says Robert Tornabell, banking professor and former Dean of Barcelona's ESADE business school.

DELAYING LOSSES

However analysts say that the banks' haste to buy property, rather than allow failing businesses to go bust, artificially lowers NPLs and only delays future loan losses that will hit sooner or later as the market takes years to revive.

Standard & Poors has said it expects house prices to fall 30 percent from peak to trough and may not hit bottom until 2010. In contrast to the last downturn, the stock of unsold new homes could touch a daunting 1.5 million by year's end, surveyors Tinsa estimate -- equivalent to over three years of peak demand.

"I'm sure that if asset values were 10 percent below their book value banks would be more than happy to sell them tomorrow. The problem is that you can't get rid of them, so they will have to keep them and take the pain little by little," said Antonio Ramirez, a London based analyst at Keefe Bruyette & Wood.

A key issue is therefore the extent to which banks have enough financial leeway to tuck assets away until the market returns.

Ramirez said Bankinter was best placed to ride out the storm thanks to its strong asset quality and BBVA was in a good relative position thanks to its cautious approach. However Banco Popular has seen a much faster deterioration in its NPL ratio which would fast eat into generic provisions.

But while the double digit profit growth seen at Spanish banks over recent years is likely to be sharply eroded by increased provisioning needs in 2009 and 2010, the main banks' capital base is solid and government intervention on the scale seen in other European countries is ruled out.

Bank balance sheets for last year show Spain's major players are already making provisions for the falling value of property assets, some of them up to 10 percent of book value.

Santander bought 2.6 billion euros of property last year at 10 percent under the market rate, it said, adding that had it not swapped that debt for property, loans on 13 percent of those assets would have defaulted.

In order to clear some of these assets, Spain's biggest bank has already offered employees homes at discounts of up to 45 percent.

"Santander has been much more active than BBVA in buying properties," said KBW's Ramirez. "We have a question mark over the future value of its much bigger real estate portfolio."

One senior banker who asked not to be named said investments in bricks and mortar still retained some safe-haven status at a time when volatile markets were wiping out other asset classes.

And Fox Pitt Kelton analyst Jagoba Garcia said that by buying before a company files creditor protection, banks get to pick prime assets rather than scraps.

"You are in a better position than when you have to divide up any spoils with other creditors," he said.

Keen to strengthen banks, the Spanish government has tabled legislation, firstly to give banks greater guarantees when borrowers go into administration and secondly to introduce real estate investment trusts (REITs) into the financial system.

Although property companies have branded the bill bringing REITs to Spain as unwieldy, analysts say that for banks REITs -- traded companies pooling property assets -- offered an important vehicle to offload billions of the assets that are likely to continue mounting for some time to come.

Source: Reuters



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Spanish Property Costa Comparison
Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Thanks to a new series of Kyero.com property guides, you can now identify those parts of the Spanish coastline where you are most likely to find a Spanish property bargain.

By defining each costa as the strip of land within 5km of the sea, and overlaying our historical house price data, we discovered how each costa had responded to the downward pressure on house prices. By comparing asking prices in Q1 2008 with Q4 2008, we created this table of most keenly discounted property on the Spanish coast.

Even though it is extremely doubtful that properties are being purchased anywhere near the asking price, this table gives buyers an idea of where vendors and their agents have a more realistic expectation of sales price.

Read the rest of the article



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