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k1976

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For months, Sweden's government has sought to play down a property crisis that has throttled confidence in the Nordic state, repeating a simple message: While some companies are in trouble, the country is not.

Now Heimstaden Bostad, a $30 billion property investor with swathes of homes from Stockholm to Berlin, is grappling with a multibillion dollar funding crunch, which has rebounded on one of its owners - the country's biggest pension fund.



That undoubtedly raises the stakes for Sweden, the European nation hardest hit by a global property rout triggered by the steep rise in interest rates last year that abruptly ended a decade of virtually free money.

Sweden is one of Europe's wealthiest states and the biggest Nordic economy, but it has an Achilles Heel - a property market where banks have lent more than 4 trillion Swedish crowns ($360 billion) to homeowners. Weighed down by these home loans, Swedes are twice as heavily indebted as Germans or Italians.


Earlier this year, the International Monetary Fund flagged Sweden's historically high household borrowing coupled with debt-driven commercial property firms and their dependence on local banks as a financial stability risk.

The property crisis accelerated this month when pension fund Alecta, which owns a 38% stake in Heimstaden Bostad, said Sweden's biggest residential landlord needed cash and it may contribute.
 

k1976

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As the property crisis widens, Sweden’s government is readying for action while crossing its fingers that it will not be needed.

Earlier this year, Karolina Ekholm, Director General of Sweden’s Debt Office, said the government had a light debt load and could afford to borrow more to intervene, addressing the possibility of giving credit guarantees or subsidised loans.

One person familiar with government thinking said that while the state was willing to help in principle, it was conscious of the potential political backlash of supporting companies which had taken big risks.

Heimstaden’s Dreyer said it was examining a “potential recapitalisation from existing shareholders” and was confident it could “mitigate financial risk” in part through bank financing but expressed openness to other forms of support.

“While we’re not dependent on external support, we could consider suitable governmental programmes if available,” Dreyer said.

In public, the government has sought to play down the crisis.

“There are potential problems that we must keep close eyes on,” Financial Markets Minister Niklas Wykman told Reuters, shortly before Heimstaden Bostad’s problems became public. “We know that rain and snow is coming. But we have shelters.”

“The government is ready to act to secure financial stability if there should be any threats or turmoil,” he said, cautioning that the problems of individual firms did not mean the wider sector was in trouble.

Sweden is among the first European countries to find itself struggling as interest rates climb because much of its property debt is short-term, making it a harbinger for the wider region, where the rising cost of money has also rocked Germany.

Roughly half of Swedish homeowners have floating-rate mortgages, meaning rate hikes quickly trigger higher bills for them.

Its developers, meanwhile, often relied on shorter-term loans or bonds that have to be replaced with pricier credit.

Heimstaden Bostad and other companies such as struggling SBB grew quickly, in part by selling cheap short-term Eurobonds, which has since become tougher.

“We’ve seen a crazy housing boom. We’re not seeing a bust yet,” said David Perez, a Sweden Democrat lawmaker. “If interest rates continue to rise, and it’s coupled with unemployment, that’s what we are afraid of.”

With interest rates still climbing, analysts such as Marcus Gustavsson of Danske Bank, believe the worst is not yet over.

He reckons that Swedish residential property prices have fallen by roughly 10 per cent and that the property market may only be halfway through the rout. REUTERS
 

k1976

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FRANKFURT, July 28 (Reuters) - Long before Europe faced its debt crisis, Sweden struggled through its own 1990s property crash. Now the country is preparing to use an old playbook to contain its problems.

Sweden first embraced property in the mid-1980s, when the country scrapped strict limits on lending, triggering a free for all that led to a housing collapse and the rescue of two banks, tipping the 10-million-strong country into recession.



The country rebounded and home prices rocketed again, putting the average price tag on a one-bedroom flat in Stockholm at roughly 4.4 million crowns ($426,800). Now sales have ground to a halt and Swedes are looking with trepidation to the future.

"The market is almost at a standstill," said Jens Henriksson, chief executive of one of the country's biggest banks, Swedbank.

The banks are closely watching the country's mid-sized property firms, several of whom are lumbered with a debt mountain built during a decade of rock-bottom interest rates and virtually free money.


https://www.reuters.com/markets/eur...perty-crash-returned-haunt-sweden-2023-07-28/

At the centre of the fallout is a $13 billion property group, SBB, which borrowed to buy public property including social housing, government offices, schools, hospitals and police stations. It is now fast running through cash.

Property is the lynchpin of the Swedish economy, making up 80% of household debt. Weighed down by home loans, Swedes are twice as heavily indebted as Germans or Italians.

Prices are unravelling after the central bank started to hike the cost of borrowing. House prices are also down by around one-fifth since their March 2022 peak, reflecting soaring mortgage costs.
 
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