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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
Outlook for investment in Scottish commercial property market positive
With talk of another referendum in Scotland if the UK votes later this month to leave the European Union new research has found that Scottish independence is not a priority for UK property investment. Investors believe that they will still invest in commercial real estate in Scotland as long as yield outperforms other regions as the issue of Scottish independence ranks lower in importance than rental yield, capital growth and a stable tax environment. Just 21% of property investors said independence was an important factor, less than half the 46% who mentioned rental yield, according to the Morton Fraser survey. Overall one in four property investors is open to investing in Scotland with 11% actively monitoring or currently pursuing opportunities. Proportionately, this is above the nation’s 8.9% share of the UK commercial real estate market. It also shows that 85% believe that leaving the EU would have no impact at all on their likelihood to invest in Scotland and 79% of property investors claimed Scotland separating from the UK would not affect their decision to invest. ‘It is easy to overestimate the potential impact of Scottish independence on the property market. Investors are ready to enter the market if the right opportunity arises, regardless of the political status of the country,’ said David Stewart, commercial real estate partner at Morton Fraser. ‘That gives us optimism for the future of the Scottish real estate industry. If the price is right and the market conditions are at least on a par with other regional areas across the UK, investors will follow the returns. The prospect of a neverendum in Scotland may drag investment, but it’s not the deciding factor for many,’ he added. With rental yield the number one criteria for potential British property investors looking to enter the Scottish market, Morton Fraser has uncovered the ‘tipping point’ at which a yield premium would encourage investment. Of the property investors likely to invest in Scotland if there was a higher yield premium, 70% said a benchmark of more than 3% or higher would encourage them to invest, with 31% saying more that 5%. That figure should be viewed in the broader context of many respondents being initially cold on investing in Scotland, so the true figure for active investors is likely to be sharper. ‘Many investors are prepared to overlook ideological or political issues to run the rule over Scottish property investments. The yield gap between Scotland and other regional cities in the rest of the UK can always be met with a quality opportunity whether you are looking to invest in Edinburgh or Manchester, Glasgow or Bristol, a high quality asset will always stand on its own merits,’ Stewart added. Continue reading
Apartment rent growth slows in the United States
Apartment rent growth in the United States has slowed nationwide over the past year, with the higher end of the market most affected, new research shows. After growing at a blistering pace for much of 2015, apartment rents across the county are growing at a slower pace thus far in 2016, according to the data from real estate firm Zillow. Overall, apartment rents nationwide grew by 3.6% for the year ending in April 2016, almost 2% points slower than the 5.4% pace reported for the year ending in April 2015. And in 23 of the nation’s 35 largest housing markets, the slowdown in rent appreciation has been more acute in luxury ZIP codes area than metro-wide. In four additional markets of Washington D.C., Sacramento, Miami-Fort Lauderdale, and Kansas City broader apartment rent growth has accelerated from 2015, but it has accelerated less in luxury ZIP codes than in the metro as a whole. Aaron Terrazas, a senior economist at Zillow, said that substantial investment in new construction, particularly at the high end of the market, has contributed to some of this pattern, although in some areas weak labour markets may also be a contributing factor. The research also shows that in the Houston metro, essentially all ZIP codes where the median rent per square foot is above $1.10 have experienced a deceleration in apartment rents. In the New York metro, the natural cut off appears to be closer to $2.30 per square foot and in the San Francisco metro, it appears to be around $3.80. The exception is the Seattle metro, where higher apartment rent growth continues to accelerate in luxury ZIP codes, although the acceleration has perhaps not been as dramatic as lower priced ZIP codes. Terrazas explained that part of this is due to rapidly rising rents in neighbourhoods north of Seattle’s Lake Washington Ship Canal. Meanwhile, the latest national index produced by Florida Atlantic University and Florida International University shows that housing market as a whole is moving deeper into buy territory, suggesting that, on average, residential housing markets around the country are sound. The Beracha, Hardin & Johnson Buy versus Rent (BH&J) Index measures the relationship between purchasing property and building wealth through a build-up in equity compared renting a comparable property and investing in a portfolio of stocks and bonds. It says that in terms of wealth creation the US housing market, when considered as a whole, has swung marginally more in favour of home ownership over renting a comparable property and investing monthly rent savings in a portfolio of stocks and bonds. Overall, 16 of the 23 metropolitan markets investigated moved in the direction of buy territory. The metro areas of Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, New York, Philadelphia and St. Louis remain solidly in buy territory. ‘These cities should have room for price growth without much worry of overheating,’ said Eli Beracha, co-author of the index and assistant professor in the T&S Hollo School of… Continue reading