Experts are predicting that Britons owning overseas properties
could reach record levels this year.
Foreign exchange firm Moneycorp says that the number of overseas
second home owners has already increased from 550,000 to 800,000
in the last two years.
The news comes at the same time as contradictory evidence about
the state of the Spanish property market which, says another
report, is on the slide.
According to the Kyero.com Spanish House Price Index, average
property prices in Spain have fallen 1.2 percent from €250,000 to €247,000
over the last three months (June – August 2007).
Another
national newspaper reported that hundreds of estate agencies
across southern Spain have gone out of business.
The story said
that this signalled the end of a buoyant housing market
that has fuelled the country's economy over the past decade
and
that many
British owners of Spanish homes were now facing major losses.
This appeared to be backed up by the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development which stated that Spanish
house prices were so over inflated that there would be “an abrupt adjustment” causing
property prices to plunge.
But figures released by the bank of Spain and the Association
of Spanish developers have contradicted these predictions.
They say Spanish property investment rose by a staggering
19.2 percent, as compared to the figures for the
same period of
2006. Foreigners invested 2.252 billion euros in
Spanish property up
to the end of May.
The association of Spanish developers (APCE), in
an article in the Spanish daily ABC, state that
almost all of the
1.6 million
new properties built in Spain over the last three
years
have already been sold which, says the organisation,
proves there
is no slow
down in the Spanish property market
The Kyero Spanish House Price Index found Alicante
to be the most representative of the average property
price
of €247,000 whilst
Malaga province remains the most expensive popular destination
amongst Britons with average property prices of €310,000 -
26 percent above the national average.
Catalan-speaking Barcelona, Mallorca and Girona
top the Index as the most expensive in Spain
with average
prices
of €621,000, €429,000
and €425,000 respectively.
Bargains are still to be had inland with the
provinces of Cordoba, Albacete and Jaen offering
the lowest
priced properties
(averaging €148,000, €142,000
and €91,000 respectively).
The Canary Island of Fuerteventura, despite
a doubling of population since 1998 (49,020
in
1998 to 105,000
Jan 2007 – Spanish
National Institute of Statistics), still offers an average property
price of €229,000.
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