Ineresting events regarding the housing market in Spain over the last two days. I have bought in Corvera for retirement purposes and am in it for the long haul so should be ok, but worrying neverthelss. For anyone panicking, I thought the article below from FT.Com helpful:
Spanish property boom ends
By Leslie Crawford in Madrid
Published: 24/4/2007 | Last Updated: 24/4/2007 20:35 London Time
Spain's overpriced property stocks came crashing down on Tuesday, with panic selling in the real estate sector signalling the end of a 10-year-old construction boom.
The sell-off dragged down related industries such as construction and banking and caused a 2.7 per cent drop in the Ibex 35 index of leading shares. The fall also rippled through other European markets as investors worried about its knock-on effects.
Sacyr Vallehermoso, the Spanish builder locked in a hostile takeover battle for Eiffage of France, fell 8 per cent, significantly reducing the value of its all-share bid.
Investors got the jitters after Astroc, a Valencian real estate developer, went into free-fall last week when its audited accounts revealed some of last year's profits came from the sale of Astroc assets to Enrique Bañuelos, its chairman.
Mr Bañuelos told a press conference he was considering changing auditors. Astroc's shares have fallen 70 per cent in a week.
Meanwhile, the heavy debt load of some real estate groups and worries about oversupply – with 800,000 new housing starts approved for this year, compared with an estimated demand for 600,000 – also contributed to the sell-off.
The sector has also lost its shine as a result of several corruption scandals linked to property deals.
Astroc had been the darling of the stock market, rising by 1,000 per cent after its listing last May. The top five real estate groups – Colonial, Metrovacesa, Fadesa, Urbis and Inmocaral – rose 132 per cent last year.
During the boom, the real estate sector had attracted some of Spain's richest billionaires, such as Amancio Ortega, chairman of the Inditex fashion empire and a shareholder in Astroc.
"The real estate bubble has not burst. It is the inflated valuations of some real estate companies that has been pricked," said Natalia Aguirre, head analyst at Renta 4, a Spanish broker.
"The sector was trading at a 20 per cent premium to its net asset value. This was not sustainable," she added.
María Trujillo, Spain's housing minister, said on Tuesday that the real estate market was heading for a soft landing, rather than a crash.
House prices rose 7 per cent in the first quarter, their lowest increase in eight years. But in many parts of Spain, house prices are falling.
ΠΗΓΗ: FT.com