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Spanish Home Sales Fell 26% In December
Monday, February 16, 2009

Spanish home sales fell 26% on the year in December, pointing to a continued correction for Spain's once-flourishing home-building industry, according to data from the country's National Statistics Institute, or INE, released Monday.

For the whole of 2008, home sales fell 29%, the INE said.

Spanish home sales fell 36% in November and 28% in October.

Demand for new homes in Spain began to fall in 2007 after prices reached nearly three times their 1997 levels and after years of overbuilding. Demand collapsed last year after the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis ushered in much tougher financing conditions and battered confidence.

Over the last decade, housing investment has grown to account for nearly 10% of Spanish gross domestic product, which is more than twice the euro-zone average.

The sharp retrenchment of housing investment helped push the euro zone's fourth-largest economy into recession in the second half of last year. Likewise, unemployment is rising faster in Spain than anywhere else in the euro zone as its labor intensive construction industry sheds hundreds of thousands of jobs.

Spain posted a 13.91% unemployment rate in the fourth quarter, the highest in the euro zone.



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Spanish Property Market in a Nutshell
Wednesday, February 11, 2009

During the boom Spanish property prices were fuelled by a virulent mix of cheap credit and speculation, which inflated a bubble. The credit crunch triggered by the US subprime mortgage meltdown put an end to that, and the bubble has now burst (it was going to burst one day anyway).

But the hangover from the credit binge is a mammoth housing glut, especially of second homes on the coast, and frightening levels of mortgage debt, which means lots of negative equity as house prices fall.

Given the extraordinary nature of the financial crisis and subsequent deleveraging process, this may turn out to be anything but an ordinary housing bust. It could get a whole lot worse.

At the very least, property values now have to return to (or under-shoot) their long-term affordability level of 4 times average disposable household income, down from the recent peak of 7 times income.

Prices for holiday homes may fall even further. After all, who really needs them?

Yet many vendors are still in denial, and continue to ask silly prices, even though they don’t sell. That means that average asking prices are a poor guide to property values. There is a gulf between what many vendors are asking, and what properties are actually selling for. But, thanks to British vendors in distress and the weak pound, there is now a reasonable choice of properties coming onto the market at sensible prices. With their have-to-sell discounts, distressed British vendors are driving the market in coastal and inland areas where foreigners tend to buy.

As a result, some genuine bargains can now be found, though potential buyers will need to do their homework to find them. You can rest assured that unscrupulous types are now busy trying to sell overpriced ‘bargains’.

Despite a recent fall in Euribor, mortgage default rates are expected to surge in 2009. This will create a big headache for mortgage lenders, and it remains to be seen how they will deal with it. It could lead to a surge of discounted properties on the market.

If so, we might soon see some mouth-watering opportunities for buyers, and, at the very least, it should be possible to find good value in Spanish property over the next year or two.

But be warned, some badly developed areas have no future at any price, and there are still plenty of pitfalls to buying property in Spain. Also, there is more to many of the “opportunities” than meets the eye. As always, stick to good locations and the best new developments.



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U.K. house prices see January bounce
Saturday, February 7, 2009

British house prices broke a 10-month string of declines in January, rising unexpectedly by 1.9% from the previous month, mortgage lender Halifax reported Thursday.
 
But Halifax warned against reading too much into the bounce, noting that house prices rarely move in the same direction month after month even during pronounced downturns.
In the three months to January, the average price declined 5.1% compared to the previous three months, Halifax said.
The average house price in January rose to 163,966 pounds ($238,479). The average price was down 17.2% from the same month last year. Economists had forecast a 1.8% monthly decline and an 18.6% annual drop.
The annual change is calculated as an average for the latest three months compared with the same period a year earlier, which provides a better view of the underlying trend, Halifax said.
House prices saw a 1.6% monthly fall in December and a 16.2% annual decline.
Halifax housing economist Martin Ellis said the January figures offer some "very early signs that market activity may be stabilizing, albeit at quite a low level."
But the scope for optimism is limited, he said.
Continuing pressures on incomes, "rising unemployment, and the negative impact of the dislocation of the financial markets on the availability of mortgage finance are expected to mean that 2009 will be a difficult year for the housing market," Ellis said.
Meanwhile, lower interest rates are improving affordability, Halifax said. The house price to average earnings ratio fell to 4.48 in December from a peak of 5.84 in July 2007, a 23% fall, Halifax said. The figure still remains above the long-term average of 4.0.
Sharp rate cuts that have brought the Bank of England's benchmark lending rate from 5% to 1.5% since October have reduced regular monthly mortgage payments for the 50% of mortgage borrowers with tracker and variable-rate mortgages.

The Bank of England is widely expected Thursday to cut the key lending rate by a further 50 basis points, or half a percentage point, to 1%.



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