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Credit Crunch ! What Credit Crunch?
Price Correction +
Strong Fundamentals =
Opportunity
This is a really exciting time to be buying residential property in Spain.
Why?
Because, in a nutshell, the fundamentals are strong but a price correction is taking place.
For example a luxury villa valued at 900,000€ in 2006 was recently sold for 415,000€.
This kind of price correction signals 'opportunity'.
Apart from making money, what turns most people's lights on is that Spain is the California of Europe and
many people want to live, retire, or holiday there.
Now, for the first time in ten years, we are entering a buyers market.
Astute investors will be able to make money and also enjoy themselves in the process.
Don't Let the Headlines Put You Off
What about the scare stories: land-grabs, demolition of illegal buildings, dodgy lawyers,
oversupply of boring identikit apartments, an economy hooked on cement and heading for
a hangover, corrupt mayors who wind up in jail, and mindless urban planning?
Well it is certainly enough to put you off and it seems to have put off a lot of the UK market.
If you talk to agents they will tell you, anecdotally, that whereas the Brits may have been
responsible for 60% of the foreign demand in 2006 now it is more like 20%.
Scare stories are a great way to sell newspapers and make superb headlines,
"The Pain In Spain Will Always Remain" but, as property professionals,
especially those advising individuals and companies making investments, apply basic
property investment skills and take advantage of the turn of the business cycle, there is a real opportunity arising.
The Fundamentals of Residential Property Investments in Spain
The fundamental growth factors of residential property investment in Spain are particularly strong even when compared with a global market.
The Costa del Sol has the best climate in
the whole of Europe with an incredible 325 days of sunshine each year, a beautiful coastline
(except for the quite small bit that looks like a cross between a council estate and a car park)
and some of the cleanest beaches in Europe measured by the Blue Flag initiative. Spain has an inspiring interior,
and a population of happy lively people who just want to have fun.
It's the end of the yield play
One way of interpreting the current state of the residential property market is to say that the era of technical investment buying anything because the whole market is going up is over. A technical investor, as opposed to a fundamental investor, only cares about whether the price is going up or coming down. Over the last 10 years in Spain prices have been going up. It almost didn't matter what you bought you made money because yields were falling (yield being inversely related to value). You didn't have to think very hard. Many inexperienced investors waded in on that basis and made a lot of money. However, many others who bought off plan two years ago intending to flip it on are now left with an un-saleable, un-let-able property with an unaffordable mortgage.
This is the stuff of bank repossessions and a price correction that will affect the whole market. So how can we make this work for us?
A fundamental investor looks at the underlying reasons why an investment may do well.
Good reasons for investing in a company or buying its shares could be a strong management team, a growth industry, and a patented product.
Perhaps more important is the communications network of airports, motorways
and an improving high speed railway network. The government and EU are
spending vast amounts of money on yet more infrastructure (motorways, etc)
which will off-set to some extent the shrinking of the construction industry.
Reaching Spain and moving around within it has never been easier.
Spain has a large established market with a significant ex-pat community who are
well catered for. It is a democracy within the EU. Now the occupier market is
strengthening as people who may previously have considered buying, rent
instead. So there are strong fundamental reasons for the population of Europe to
continue to want to enjoy Spain and many of the economic pointers look good.
"One man's ridiculous offer in another man's correct price based on the growth prospects"
The Natural Turn of the Cycle
Chartists, investor types who ponder over graphs, also point out that we are simply going through a
cycle. All markets go through cycles. The last 10 years has seen 197% capital growth (a three-fold
increase) in the Spanish residential property market. A slow down now is a law of nature and, in
property, market cycles go nice and slowly so everyone gets an opportunity to participate. The
question is how far will the curve drop and when will it turn? As you would expect at the turn of a
cycle, there is a variety of different expert opinions.
Many professional investors suggest we need to wait a little longer for the curve to bottom out. In
the CULS seminar I mentioned earlier there was talk about sellers being either in acceptance or
denial. They were not necessarily talking about sellers deepest subconscious fears.
The suggestion was that those in denial believe, mistakenly, that the underlying value of their investment is more or
less intact. Maybe we do need to wait a little longer before we hit the bottom.
"Local knowledge and professional advice are essential"
One thing to look at is whether there are good numbers of buyers.
Talking to agents the picture is confused. Many agents say there are few buyers but also claim there are a lot of bargain hunters
putting in ridiculous offers. One man's ridiculous offer is another man's correct price based on the growth prospects.
Agents also say they had a good month in January 2008 with demand from the Scandinavians and Russian Market .
They say that vendors accepted sensible but not ridiculous offers. Perhaps the estate agents are just trying to talk the market up.
The interesting thing is that all the agents are optimistic about the numbers of enquiries which they expect to receive over the next two months.
Some are very optimistic.
So perhaps there is plenty of counter cyclical demand. Perhaps the curve will be shallower
than we think. Maybe we are already nearing the bottom of the cycle.
This wasn't the view of the panel of experts at the CULS seminar who, although talking about pan European investment,
discussed Spain in terms of a pocket of trouble in an otherwise not-too-bad-a-picture, and who proposed waiting for the shift in
sellers' consciousness to take place in order to pick up some real bargains.
But might we miss the bottom of the cycle if we dither about waiting for a shift in sellers'
consciousness?
The answer is that the time has come to return to sound fund management
skills. It's back to basic property investment skills so that your investment performs
whatever the market as whole does and whether you exactly hit the bottom or not doesn't matter.
Basic Property Investment Skills
The key thing about investing in property is that you're not buying a homogenous product like, say, shares in ICI.
While every share you buy in ICI is the same, every property is different. And while you personally can't do anything to improve the
performance of your investment in ICI you may well be able to do a great deal to enhance the performance of your property investment.
To continue the point of comparison with shares, now is the time for stock picking rather than buying the index.
The wonderful thing about property is that there's nearly always an angle to make money: build an extension;
put in a swimming pool; paint the guttering; sell off the garden; throw your second-hand Porsche into the deal!
And often there is something you know which isn't necessarily known to everyone: there are plans for a new housing estate which will
impair the lovely view (sell),
or a new motorway
linking your property to the beach cutting the travel time from 1 hour to 10 minutes (buy).
So local knowledge and professional advice are essential.
Spain is a vast and diverse country and there are
large regional variations and pockets where local
supply and demand forces have a big effect on
growth. You must bear in mind the local dynamics
which may affect performance more than general
market forces. In fact you need to become an
expert in the market where you intend to invest, or
find a professional you can trust, so you can
recognise a bargain when it comes up.
Be prepared to move fast i.e. have your professional
team and finance lined up.
Nothing seduces
a distressed seller more than the prospect of
money in the bank today, so you don't want to be
making offers subject to finance.
By the way did you think about asking your bank
to put up 80% of the costs of your ICI shares?
Well they will, even today, for your property investment
assuming you are not personally in danger
of being credit-crunched.
Remember to look at your proposition in terms of
let-ability if it needs to be income producing
(holiday lets must have a pool). Don't forget to
identify, before you start your search, what kind of
property is going to bounce back hardest
(maybe
avoid the vast swathes of cheap box apartments
that stain the Costa del Sol unless you're a
holiday company and can make them incomeproducing)
and, above all, find a motivated seller.
Find a Motivated Seller
It is clear that for those sellers who can't wait out the
buyers market, 2008 is going to be a disastrous
year. Distasteful as it may be, there are always those
who, for whatever reason, can't wait and have to
sell. Divorce, ill health, death, redundancy may
feature among the reasons and as we know wherever
there's trouble there's an opportunity.
There are likely to be a number of bank repossessions
too. It is predicted that the number of repossessions
will overwhelm the insiders who normally
snaffle up the bargains.
Making friends with bankers is not a bad fund
management skill to cultivate. Bankers are often the
first to know when there is a deal to be done, and
they may have sated their personal appetite for
off-the-market deals.
Make Money and Have Fun Doing It
Here is an example that I know of personally. You can buy a charming 4 bedroom chalet, with a
pool and a good piece of land and panoramic views over a lake, half an hour from the Mediterranean,
and 45 minutes from an international airport, for around €300,000. This is a divorce settlement
and the owners have to sell.
Done up (it has been neglected recently) you could be asking around €600,000 even in today's
market. Buy it, and have some fun making it into a swish and stylish bolt hole from the UK. There is
space for another 3 rooms and lots of verandas and terraces. Let it if you want to. Let on short term
holiday lets it could yield around 6% gross.
Then after 5 years of sipping a cold white wine on the terrace enjoying the view and your tapas,
assuming you don't let it all the time, sell it.
Make some money and have loads of fun doing it.
Certainly in my view we will look back in 5 years time and say that 2008 was when the smart
money went into Spain.
Thanks to PIMS Costa Del Sol


