NPL&REO News

Notaries report 2.6% January rise in Spanish property prices

Sales figures were stagnant across Spain for the third month in row, latest data from the countries’ notaries show. These report y-o-y increases of just 0.3% in the number of houses sold and of 6.1% in mortgage activity in January 2009.

These figures seem to show some signals of slowing down in the level of activity in Spain’s real estate market, after a long period of significant growth. In November, the notaries confirmed a year-on-year drop in sales figures for the first time in 2018, albeit a very slight one (the decrease has been revised to just 0.2%), and in December the upward movement was a mere 3%, whereas as recently as last summer double-digit increases were still the norm.

During the first month of 2019, according to the notaries’ provisional figures, were recorded 40,388 sales and purchases following a general upward trend which began in early 2013, and the average price paid for units of housing rose by 2.6% to 1,424 €/sqm.

Meanwhile, the number of mortgages constituted on housing purchases during January was 19,390, 6.1% more than in the same month in 2018, and the average loan capital was up by 0.9% at €135,616. Both this figure and the average market price of property have risen in each of the last nine months.

These data show that 48% of all purchases were financed by mortgage loans in January – the figure still has not reached 50% since 2010 – and that in these cases the mortgages accounted for an average of 74.7% of the sale price, close to the lowest proportion in the last 12 years.

 

Original Story: Murcia Today | News

Photo: FreeImages.com/Blues 57

Edition:Prime Yield

 

Spain’s housing market shows signs of cooling in loans

Spain’s vibrant property market just showed another small signal of slowing in the end of 2018, as the new loans in houses recorded the lowest pace in four years, Reuters reported.

While the number of new mortgages on houses reached a seven-year high in 2018, the annual growth slowed, according to latest data released by the Spanish National Statistics Institute. The €42.7 billion lent represented a double-digit jump from 2017, yet the increase eased from the previous year’s.

The number of new house mortgages rose 10.3% last year, INE said. That’s down from growth of 10.7% in 2017, 14.6% in 2016 and 20.8% in 2015.

As an investment, homes have been beating many major alternatives. Prices rose an annual 7.2% in the third quarter, the most recent periodavailable. That compares with a drop of 9.6% in the benchmark IBEX 35 index in the same 12 months, and a 0.1% gain in a one-year to 10-year Spanish government bonds index.

Activity varied widely across the country, with regions like Valencia and Madrid showing more than 14% mortgage volume growth, to increases as low as 5.2% in Galicia and 2.4% in Aragon.

Surging purchase prices and rents in big cities in the past few years nevertheless are provoking the Socialist government to plan urgent legislation to cap apartment rents. Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez is negotiating a mechanism that could allow regions to limit rental increases, El Pais newspaper reported.

Sanchez would need parliament to ratify the decree. He faces possibly being driven from power in April general elections, according to opinion polls.

Original Story: Bloomberg | Todd White and Macarena Muñoz Montijano
Photo: FreeImages.com/Philipp K
Edition:Prime Yield

 

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