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French Alps ski property market reviving thanks to low mortgages and new infrastructure

The French ski property market is recovering with new build apartments, rather than chalets, are leading the way and interest boosted by new infrastructure projects, new research shows. Those choosing to buy in key Alpine resorts will also find far more facilities available such as the €36 million mini-resort Mille8 in Les Arcs, a family friendly resort within a resort with new nursery slopes, tobogganing runs, a swimming pool, spa, gym and Courchevel's €63 million waterpark and spa Aquamotion. La Compagnie du Mont Blanc announced recently that it would spend €477 million over 40 years on new lifts and pistes in Chamonix while Val d’Isère has just spent €16 million renewing lifts, pistes and restaurants on La Tête de Solaise, immediately above the town. Rock bottom Euro mortgage rates are another key factors behind the recovery, according to the French Alps Property Report from Erna Low Property. It points out that it is now possible to get a 15 year fixed rate repayment mortgage with the interest set at just 1.4%. However, it is easier to get a small mortgage than a large one at the moment. Indeed, according to Stephane Briere of French mortgage brokers CAFPI International banks would rather approve 10 €100,000 mortgages than a single €1 million one. The report suggests that activities and facilities in the summer are as important for buyers in the Alps as the winter sports. Road cycling, mountain biking and trail running have all made the summer fashionable again in the mountains, and buyers want to know what a mountain resort offers in July and August as well as winter. In part, that's because some are keen runners and cyclists themselves: but also because they're looking for better rental returns. Also leaseback schemes, which allow buyers to reclaim the VAT on their property purchase provided they put their apartment into a rental pool are becoming more flexible. In the past, most leasebacks gave owners just three or four weeks' annual use of their property. But now some allow owners 26 weeks of use along with the full 20% VAT refund. The report also says that a new wave of developments is giving buyers who are keen skiers the chance to buy back door entry to the world's most famous ski areas and make big savings in the process. Buying in Les Menuires, for example, will give the owner the whole of the Three Valleys. Meanwhile, an apartment in Tignes-les-Brevières gives access to the slopes of Val d'Isère. According to Francois Marchand, Erna Low property director, sales volumes are up, revenues are up, and so too is the average price of each property sold and British buyers are returning but they are more realistic about what buying a second home in the mountains means. ‘These days, our clients see their property purchase as bricks and mortar with benefits, a long term investment whose primary purpose is to improve their quality of life. We’re noticing more… Continue reading

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UK house prices fall ahead of EU referendum, latest index shows

More evidence is emerging that the run up to the referendum on the UK’s future in the European Union is affecting residential property prices. Property values in England and Wales fell by 0.4% in May, the steepest fall since November 2011, according to the data from the lastest index from Your Move and Reeds Rains. This takes the average house price to %293,599 and year on year values are still up 6.8% but 5.4% if London and the South East are excluded from the calculation. However, London’s house prices fell by 0.3% or £1,769 month on month and it was the weakest May for home sales in five years, after stamp duty surcharge caused a rush of buy to let sales in March. But house prices in Slough defied the trend, jumping 23.3% year on year, with values lifted by Crossrail and new tech jobs, according to the index report. According to Adrian Gill, director of Your Move and Reeds Rains estate agents, May’s correction in property values also follows on from a surge in activity earlier in the year, when second home buyers and landlords brought forward their purchases to avoid the stamp duty surcharge. ‘That tax hike and the Government’s anti-landlord policies are weighing down the market, but the main factor is short term confidence ahead of the 23rd June referendum,’ he said. The year on year growth in house prices has also slowed, down to 6.8% in May, from 7.7% in April. ‘With the Chancellor predicting that a Brexit from the EU would reduce property values by at least 10%, many buyers are holding off until after the uncertainly surrounding the referendum has been resolved,’ Gill explained. The fall in prices in London has pushed average property values in the capital city back under the £600,000 mark, with the value of a typical home in the city falling to £598,421. However, this decline in property values has not spread across the entire capital. While house prices in the most expensive eleven boroughs have declined by an average of £4,000 or 0.5% from the previous month, values in the cheapest eleven boroughs continue to rise, jumping £3,000 or 0.8% month on month. But despite maintaining property values well above the rest of the UK, the demand for homes in London continues to grow. In the three months between February and April, sales of homes in London increased by 15%, compared to the same period last year. ‘The majority of this upswing in sales came from flats. As landlords often prefer to provide flats to rent, these properties were a popular choice before the stamp duty surcharge came into force in April,’ said Gill. He also pointed out that with so much uncertainty in the UK economy, home sales have been subdued. While the total number of property sales did increase from the previous month, this month has seen the fewest May property sales since 2011,… Continue reading

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EU referendum causing uncertainty in UK property market with prices set to fall

Increasing uncertainty is weighing on the UK residential property market which could result in prices falling, according to the latest monthly housing report from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. The report paves out a scenario where prices could experience a short term drop due to uncertainty surrounding the referendum later this month on the future of the UK in the European Union. It would be the first such fall since 2012. The most recent polls are putting the Leave campaign marginally ahead of the Remain campaign and in many areas of business and economic life in the UK this is causing a wait and see attitude. This is already affecting the property market according to the RICS report which says that prices across the UK saw only modest growth in May while prices in central London fell. On top of this demand from buyers is falling at the fastest rate in eight years. RICS predicts that house prices nationally are set to dip over the coming months, while rents increase while in central London some 35% more property professionals are reporting that prices had fallen rather than risen over the past month. While prices are continuing to climb modestly across the rest of the UK, this trend looks set to fade, with 10% more respondents predicting that prices would fall rather than rise over the coming three months. This is the first time that a fall in prices has been predicted since 2012. London and East Anglia are expected to be worst hit with 43% and 33% of respondents saying that prices will fall over the next quarter. ‘Sadly, for the many young people looking to enter the property market, it is unlikely that we are seeing the emergence of a more affordable market. Instead, it appears to me that what we are looking at is a short term drop caused by the uncertainty resulting from the forthcoming EU referendum coupled by a slowdown following the rush to get into the market ahead of the tax change on the purchase of investment properties,’ said Simon Rubinsohn, RICS chief economist. ‘Certainly, that’s the story we are hearing from our members. There is not at this point a sense that a fundamental shift is taking place in the market,’ he added. Buyer demand fell across the UK for the second consecutive month and at the fastest pace since 2008, with 33% more property professionals saying that demand decreased last month. The survey revealed that in the longer term, while house prices are thought likely to regain momentum, rents look set to outpace them, with UK rents predicted to increase by 4.7% year on year for the next five years, compared to house price increases of 4.1%. The number of agreed sales also fell for the second consecutive month with a net balance of 22% of respondents reporting a fall rather than a rise in activity. However, Thomas van Straubenzee of prime London property agents VanHan, believes that… Continue reading

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