Spanish property: A wise investment?
Posted by Landlord September 18, 2007
According to an article in the Spanish daily ABC, the association of Spanish developers (APCE) asserts that almost all of the 1.6 million new properties built in Spain over the last 3 years have already been sold, refuting claims that 1 million newly built Spanish properties remain unsold.
The association also argues that reports of 800,000 odd housing starts each year are substantially exaggerated, as this figure relates to planning approvals, not all of which get built. According to the Spanish housing ministry’s figures 665,000 new properties were started last year, and 597,600 were finished.
Figures from the Bank of Spain reveal that foreign investment in Spanish property increased by 19.2% in the first 5 months of the year compared to the same period in 2006. The amount invested by Spaniards in property outside of Spain almost doubled over the same period.
The total amount invested by foreigners to the end of May was 2.252 billion Euros, almost the same as the amount invested in 2005, though still significantly below the 2.925 billion Euros invested in the peak year of 2003.
How does one reconcile this increase in foreign investment in Spanish property at a time when the market is clearly turning down?
One explanation might be that many of the off-plan sales made in 2004 and 2005 are only now being recorded as investments as buyers take possession of their properties and complete the purchase before notary. This is the moment when the investment is recorded in the national accounts.
Nevertheless, the figures do seem to suggest that foreign demand for Spanish property has picked up significantly since last year, even though property professionals report that the market is still very slow. By the end of the year we should know whether foreign demand has rebounded, or whether these figures can be explained by some other factor.
- Source: Excerpted from SpanishPropertyInsight.com, via Expatica.com, Sep. 2007
