Property prices down in Cyprus, but decline is slowing

Taylor Scott International News

The residential property market in Cyprus is still struggling despite the island’s economy showing signs of stability in the third quarter of 2015, with sales volumes low. Across Cyprus house prices fell by 0.5% and apartment prices by 0.4%, according to the latest index from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). The biggest drop was in Famagusta where apartment prices fell by 1.2% and in Limassol where house prices fell by 3.2% while house prices were down 0.3% in Nicosia. However, the RICS index report points out that the rate at which prices are falling has slowed in most cities across Cyprus and there were few sales overall due to the prevailing economic conditions although the volume was higher year on year. In addition certain locations such as Paphos, Larnaca and Famagusta are showing signs of stability where the housing markets are progressively bottoming out. The RICS index also shows that on a quarterly basis rental values increased by 0.3% for apartments, 1.5% for houses and 2.6% for offices while retail units saw a fall of 1.1% and warehouses a fall of 0.1%. Compared to the third quarter of 2014, rents dropped by 1.5% for flats, 0.5% for houses, 4% for retail, 2.5% for warehouses, and 0.2% for offices. Areas that had dropped the most early on in the property cycle now nearing or at the trough and Paphos and Famagusta are showing some signs of price stability. Paphos is the only place with positive returns in all asset classes when compared to the third quarter of 2014. At the end of the third quarter of 2015 average gross yields stood at 3.9% for apartments, 2% for houses, 5.2% for retail, 4.3% for warehouses, and 4.5% for offices. The parallel reduction in capital values and rents is keeping investment yields relatively stable and at low levels compared to yields overseas, the RICS report says, adding that it suggests that there is still room for some re-pricing of capital values to take place, especially for properties in secondary locations. Meanwhile, the latest monthly data from the Department of Lands and Surveys, shows that sales increased across Cyprus apart from Larnaca where they fell by 1%. Sales in Nicosia were up 64%, in Paphos up 30%, in Limassol up 28% and in Famagusta up 4%. But it must be remembered that sales volumes are low. There was a total of 463 sales contracts recorded covering residential, commercial and building plots. However the Land Registry data also shows that during the first 10 months of the year sales are up 8% compared with the same period in 2014 with 3,993 transactions completed. Taylor Scott International

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