• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Desperate Property Deals: Will it happen in Singapore?.

lifeafter41

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Desperate property deals


Tue, Oct 14, 2008
AFP



MADRID - AS the financial crisis bites ever deeper into Spain's once-booming housing market, estate agents are resorting to desperate measures, such as offering 'two for one' sales or free holidays, in a bid to offload their properties.
The one-time 'golden boys' of the property business were first hit in 2007, when 10 years of unrelenting expansion ended when the sector collapsed amid rising interest rates, oversupply and tougher lending conditions.

They are now suffering in the depths of the worldwide financial crisis in which the few potential buyers are unable to obtain loans and are at the same burdened by their own debts.

But despair has led to ingenuity.

The most recent example is a property developer in the southern region of Andalucia who is giving away two homes for the price of one in a bid to find takers.

'Buy a townhouse in Terrazas de Miraflores and get another one-room apartment in Baviera Golf,' the Salsa Immobiliaria company says on its website below a photo of the townhouses surrounding a swimming pool.

And this type of initiative is not unique.

Early last year, as the government and developers were predicting a 'soft landing' for the market, a chain of real estate agents, Re/Max, decided to have a sale of apartments during the legal period for sales in January.

As it became apparent that the property crash was going be to worse than feared, the offers became more and more enticing - a free holiday or a car or a cheque in exchange for a signature on a property contract.

Some agents thought they had found the solution by holding 'Dutch auctions' in which the auctioneer begins with a high asking price which is lowered until someone is willing to accept the price on offer.

But these sorts of initiatives have failed to stir the market. With salaries among the lowest in the euro zone and faced with rising inflation, unemployment and interest rates, Spaniards are not buying.

And many of those who want to buy can't get mortgages.

'The credit restrictions have made the absorption of the oversupply more difficult,' said Professor Josep Oliver, an economics professor at Barcelona University.

'We have built 650,000 properties against a demand for 450,000 in 2007,' said housing minister Beatriz Corredor.

The combination of elements has added up to a freefall in the market.

Sales plummeted 31.5 per cent in the second quarter from the same period in 2007, the housing ministry said.

And developers see an even bleaker future.

Mr Pedro Perez, the head of 'G-14' property developers group, said there are now 800,000 empty properties in Spain.

Industry professionals believe that the price of new properties is down by around 15 to 20 per cent, but refuse to go as low to 30 or 40 per cent.

'Before they get to that point, they would prefer to sell to the banks,' said Mr Guillermo Chicote, the head of Spain's association for developers and constructors associations. -- AFP
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
Desperate property deals


Tue, Oct 14, 2008
AFP



MADRID - AS the financial crisis bites ever deeper into Spain's once-booming housing market, estate agents are resorting to desperate measures, such as offering 'two for one' sales or free holidays, in a bid to offload their properties.
The one-time 'golden boys' of the property business were first hit in 2007, when 10 years of unrelenting expansion ended when the sector collapsed amid rising interest rates, oversupply and tougher lending conditions.

They are now suffering in the depths of the worldwide financial crisis in which the few potential buyers are unable to obtain loans and are at the same burdened by their own debts.

But despair has led to ingenuity.

The most recent example is a property developer in the southern region of Andalucia who is giving away two homes for the price of one in a bid to find takers.

'Buy a townhouse in Terrazas de Miraflores and get another one-room apartment in Baviera Golf,' the Salsa Immobiliaria company says on its website below a photo of the townhouses surrounding a swimming pool.

And this type of initiative is not unique.

Early last year, as the government and developers were predicting a 'soft landing' for the market, a chain of real estate agents, Re/Max, decided to have a sale of apartments during the legal period for sales in January.

As it became apparent that the property crash was going be to worse than feared, the offers became more and more enticing - a free holiday or a car or a cheque in exchange for a signature on a property contract.

Some agents thought they had found the solution by holding 'Dutch auctions' in which the auctioneer begins with a high asking price which is lowered until someone is willing to accept the price on offer.

But these sorts of initiatives have failed to stir the market. With salaries among the lowest in the euro zone and faced with rising inflation, unemployment and interest rates, Spaniards are not buying.

And many of those who want to buy can't get mortgages.

'The credit restrictions have made the absorption of the oversupply more difficult,' said Professor Josep Oliver, an economics professor at Barcelona University.

'We have built 650,000 properties against a demand for 450,000 in 2007,' said housing minister Beatriz Corredor.

The combination of elements has added up to a freefall in the market.

Sales plummeted 31.5 per cent in the second quarter from the same period in 2007, the housing ministry said.

And developers see an even bleaker future.

Mr Pedro Perez, the head of 'G-14' property developers group, said there are now 800,000 empty properties in Spain.

Industry professionals believe that the price of new properties is down by around 15 to 20 per cent, but refuse to go as low to 30 or 40 per cent.

'Before they get to that point, they would prefer to sell to the banks,' said Mr Guillermo Chicote, the head of Spain's association for developers and constructors associations. -- AFP
Do let us know here if you hear of any such deals in SG.
I'm quite sure there will be some. Singkies are well known for being very concerned about "face", and there would certainly have been some fools who got themselves into serious debt just to buy a property to show off.
 
Top