Tag Archives: real estate
Property prices down in Cyprus, but decline is slowing
The residential property market in Cyprus is still struggling despite the island’s economy showing signs of stability in the third quarter of 2015, with sales volumes low. Across Cyprus house prices fell by 0.5% and apartment prices by 0.4%, according to the latest index from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). The biggest drop was in Famagusta where apartment prices fell by 1.2% and in Limassol where house prices fell by 3.2% while house prices were down 0.3% in Nicosia. However, the RICS index report points out that the rate at which prices are falling has slowed in most cities across Cyprus and there were few sales overall due to the prevailing economic conditions although the volume was higher year on year. In addition certain locations such as Paphos, Larnaca and Famagusta are showing signs of stability where the housing markets are progressively bottoming out. The RICS index also shows that on a quarterly basis rental values increased by 0.3% for apartments, 1.5% for houses and 2.6% for offices while retail units saw a fall of 1.1% and warehouses a fall of 0.1%. Compared to the third quarter of 2014, rents dropped by 1.5% for flats, 0.5% for houses, 4% for retail, 2.5% for warehouses, and 0.2% for offices. Areas that had dropped the most early on in the property cycle now nearing or at the trough and Paphos and Famagusta are showing some signs of price stability. Paphos is the only place with positive returns in all asset classes when compared to the third quarter of 2014. At the end of the third quarter of 2015 average gross yields stood at 3.9% for apartments, 2% for houses, 5.2% for retail, 4.3% for warehouses, and 4.5% for offices. The parallel reduction in capital values and rents is keeping investment yields relatively stable and at low levels compared to yields overseas, the RICS report says, adding that it suggests that there is still room for some re-pricing of capital values to take place, especially for properties in secondary locations. Meanwhile, the latest monthly data from the Department of Lands and Surveys, shows that sales increased across Cyprus apart from Larnaca where they fell by 1%. Sales in Nicosia were up 64%, in Paphos up 30%, in Limassol up 28% and in Famagusta up 4%. But it must be remembered that sales volumes are low. There was a total of 463 sales contracts recorded covering residential, commercial and building plots. However the Land Registry data also shows that during the first 10 months of the year sales are up 8% compared with the same period in 2014 with 3,993 transactions completed. Continue reading
New research reveals the rapid growth of the private rented sector in the UK
Over two million homes have changed tenure in the last decade when taking into account all property sales between owner occupiers and landlords, according to new research. Some 1,550,000 properties have gone from being lived in by their owner to being lived in by a tenant, while 550,000 have moved the other way, from the private rented sector into owner occupation. This has resulted in an extra million homes being occupied by a tenant rather than a home owner, equivalent to the number of households in the North East of England, says the research from property group Countrywide plc. Homes transferring from owner occupation into the private rented sector accounted for half of the growth in the number of privately rented homes over the same period. Most of the remaining growth in the private rented sector has come from landlords buying new build homes. The research also found that some 700,000 new homes built since 2005 have found their way into the private rented sector. The remaining homes changing tenure have come from social housing and residential conversions. Despite this, homes are only around half as likely to change tenure as people. First time buyers end up buying 65% of the homes that leave the private rented sector, and last year 45,000 first time buyers bought their home from a landlord, the highest number since the market downturn in 2008. This equates to 15% of all those who got onto the housing ladder for the first time. With first time buyers and landlords tending to look for homes which are smaller and cheaper than average, they often find themselves in competition. As a result, both groups are disproportionately likely to sell homes to one another. The research explains that given the private rented sector is largest in London and the South East, this is where first time buyers are mostly likely to buy their home from a landlord. One in five new buyers in London, and one in six in the South East, bought a home which had previously been rented out. It is in these two regions where the difference between what new buyers paid when buying from a landlord and those that didn’t is greatest. Those buying from a landlord paid on average 8% less than those that didn’t. ‘The rapid growth of the private rented sector has to come from somewhere, while the tenure may change, the physical home remains,’ said Johnny Morris, director of research at Countrywide. ‘The sector has been growing since 2005 but the number of home owners has fallen in each of the last 10 years. This scale of shift in tenure shows that the current push from the government to increase the number of homeowners is unlikely to be enough to reverse the decline,’ he explained. ‘Although landlords and first time buyers might not appear natural bedfellows, because they tend to look for similar types of homes they do end up selling to each… Continue reading
Majority of home owners in Australia concerned about property values
More than two thirds of Australians are concerned that Australia’s housing is vulnerable to a significant correction in values, according to the latest housing sentiment survey. Some 68% of respondents to the September CoreLogic RP Data TEG survey said they believe the housing market is vulnerable to a significant correction in values. However, the findings are a reduction from the previous quarter results where 75% of respondents indicated they were concerned about a significant downturn, but despite the apparent improvement in consumer perceptions, a significant proportion of the community are wary of substantial value falls across the nation’s largest and most important asset class, which according to CoreLogic RP Data is worth an estimated $6.2 trillion. ‘While we don’t envisage dwelling values will fall substantially, the probability of declines in Sydney, and to a lesser extent in Melbourne, after such a strong run of capital gains isn’t unlikely,’ said CoreLogic RP Data head of research Tim Lawless. ‘Home values are already trending lower in Darwin and Perth. It was less than three and a half years ago that capital city dwelling values fell by 7.4% between October 2010 and May 2012,’ he pointed out. Additionally, 95% of survey respondents believe that foreign demand is pushing property values higher, with 19% indicating that foreign buyers were responsible for placing ‘extreme’ upwards pressure on home values. Only 5% of survey respondents thought foreign buying activity wasn’t pushing home values higher. According to Lawless, the results are a stark reminder that the true extent of foreign buying of residential properties across Australia continues to lack transparency, despite the House Economics Committee Report on Foreign Investment in Residential Real Estate being handed down almost a year ago. He added that the latest statistics haven’t been updated since the 2013/14 financial year. Some 55% of survey respondents thought that the current housing market conditions represented a good time to buy a property, down from 60% in June. Respondents based in Sydney, where housing market conditions have been running the hottest, were the most pessimistic about buying conditions, however 29.7% of respondents still thought that now was a good time to be getting into the market. Alternatively, more than 70% of survey respondents thought buying conditions were ripe in the Australian Capital Territory, Adelaide, regional Queensland and Perth. The proportion of survey respondents who thought property values will rise over the coming six months has been trending lower, with respondents who thought home values will rise over the next six months dropping from 49% in March and 48% in June to just 40% of all respondents in September. Continue reading




