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: Spain
Spanish property boom ends amidst share panic
By Keith Lee
14 June 2007
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Spanish property values took a massive hammering recently,
as fears grew that the market boom had ended. Amidst panic amongst
investors and property developers, some companies saw large percentages
of their share price wiped out in a few hours.
One such company affected was Astroc, which saw 65 percent
of its share values disappear. Last year, the Valencia-based company
was floated at 6 a share and reached its highest level at
75 in February 2007. Last week, it had fallen to 14.
Eight other major property companies were affected. Spains
blue chip index also fell by 2 percent as a result of the property
crash, as losses rose to 2.2 billion. Shares in Spains
biggest property group, Sacyr, fell by 8.15 percent, and property
developers Colonial and Immocracal saw stock fall by more than
11 percent.
The immediate panic was caused by signs that Spains property
market was suffering from a massive overbuilding programme, coupled
with high euro interest rates.
Paul Isbell from the Elcano Royal Institute said, Spain
is living its longest and most intense period of expansion since
it became a market democracy in the late 1970s. But Spain has
to ask itself, when will this change? We are past due for a recession.
The question is whether it will be a soft landing, with growth
tapering off without a recession, or a harder landing.
While some economic analysts have played down the prospect
of a much harder landing, nearly all have agreed that
the property boom is over. According to Lombard Street Research
Analysts, The country is over-housed, households are over-indebted
and the construction industry continues to churn out houses.
According to Lombard, Spain has a massive oversupply of houses,
with more than 800,000 new homes built last year. In the town
of Galicia, housing stock has grown six times as fast as the population.
During this period, planning permission has been granted for more
than 240,000 properties, while Galicias population has only
grown by 35,000.
A substantial price drop would force numerous owners into distress
sales, further depressing the market. Speculation has mounted
that one company had been buying its own properties in order to
keep prices artificially high. If true, this would add to the
already seamy side of this market. A number of recent corruption
scandals linked to the construction industry in Spain have revealed
the outright criminality at the heart of the countrys recent
economic boom.
The most high-profile of these scandals centres on the jet-set
resort of Marbella on Spains southern coast. To date, no
fewer than 79 companies have been implicated, 50 people arrested
and 2.6 billion (US$3.3 billion) worth of assets seized.
In March, more than 50,000 people demonstrated in Mallorca to
protest against the unsustainable developments. Many were protesting
the numerous illegal construction projects that are going on in
the area, often spoiling scenes of natural beauty.
Another indicator of the looming crisis has been the cutting
of vacation home prices by Spanish property agents, in some cases
by 10 percent. This slowdown will impact in Europe and will
have a psychological effect across the continent, said Tobias
Just at Deutsche Bank.
The second-largest US real estate broker, Re/Max International,
lowered its prices by 26 percent on just under 5,000 homes in
Spain in January 2007. General housing prices in Spain have recently
stalled. Prices rose only 7.2 percent in the first quarter of
2007 compared with nearly double that figure over the same period
in 2006. This is the lowest increase since 1999 and the ninth
consecutive quarter easing since 2004.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said
in January that house prices in Spain may be overvalued by as
much as 30 percent. It warned that a sudden increase in interest
rates could cause an abrupt adjustment in which prices would
plunge. According to Deutsche Bank, a 30 percent slump could
reduce Spains economic growth by as much as 1.8 percentage
points.
Another indicator that all is not right with the property-driven
Spanish economy is a study by Bloomberg News showing that some
Spanish real estate developers were paying five times more to
borrow money than their American counterparts. This means that
Spanish companies are perceived as a much higher risk.
Any kind of slump in house prices would have a dramatic impact
on Spanish banks. Many of the countrys largest financial
institutions, such as Santander, Central Hispano and Banco Bilbao
Vizcaya Argentaria, are owed 1.3 trillion by builders, developers
and mortgage holders, according to the Spanish Mortgage Association.
The 379 billion of loans to property firms is equal to nearly
half of all corporate loans, according to recent research by the
Bank of Spain.
The housing bubble in Spainas elsewhere in the worldis
being driven in large part by financial speculation. With interest
rates at historic lows over the past several years and returns
on investments in the stock market declining with the bursting
of the dot-com bubble, both large and small investors have been
pouring money into the real estate market.
Fully 18.5 percent of the Spanish economy
is housing related, twice as high as the rest of Europe. If Spain
were to fall back to the European level, it would have serious
implications, as the country has one of the lowest rates of productivity
growth in the European Union. Such a slump would further exacerbate
the already dangerous position of Spains foreign balance
of payments, which has steadily declined year on year. Last year,
Spain had a current account deficit of US$107 billionthe
second largest in the world behind the United States. To offset
the crisis, in the previous two months the Banco de Espana has
sold off 80 tonnes of gold in what some have said is an effort
to finance the current account deficit, which stands at 9.5 percent
of GDP.
Many of the new housing complexes are being built by a new
layer of businessmen who have gotten extremely rich off the back
of Spains construction boom. One such person is Astrocs
Enrique Banuelos, who made it to the Forbes top 100 richest people
in March of this year with a fortune of US$7.7 billion. The working
class, however, has been plunged further into debt as it fights
a constant, losing battle to keep up with the cost of living.
Leading banks have begun targeting the most vulnerable sections
of society, such as the countrys 4 million immigrants. This
population is particularly vulnerable, as it is largely young
people, low skilled and with next to no credit history. For the
predatory Spanish banks, this is too tempting. While this is a
high-risk strategy for the banks, it can turn a quick profit in
the short term. The banks can charge a high interest rate on mortgage
loans, and the homes of the large number of defaulters can be
repossessed and placed on the market again.
Spains fourth-largest bank, Caja Madrid, has close to
half a million immigrant customers20 percent of the banks
mortgage section. To attract business amongst the immigrant community,
many banks have opened new branches staffed with immigrants from
countries such as Morocco, China and various Latin American countries.
Asprima, a property developers association, estimates
that one in three new homes were sold to immigrants. With immigrant
workers generally employed in very-low-income jobs, Asprima estimates
that they are, on average, borrowing eight times their annual
income.
The banks have also taken advantage of the difficulties faced
by young people in getting onto the housing ladder. Many of the
sub-prime loans target the young and poorest sections of Spanish
society. Figures show that the average age that young people leave
home has risen to 34 years old.
According to the Youth Council of Spain, on average, 60.8 percent
of a young persons wage is needed to access private market
housing. These young workers earn an average wage of 1,922
(US$2,480) per month before tax and social security payments.
They are already spending nearly half of their income on accommodation,
which has doubled in price in real terms over the last decade.
Household debt has risen to more than 110 percent of income
and approaches US levels. The most recent reports show the amount
of outstanding mortgage loans stands at a record 811 billion
(US$1 trillion), a rise of 26 percent since last year. As 80 percent
of Spains population own their own homes, many workers are
in an extremely vulnerable position should interest rates rise
sharply.
In Spain, just over 95 percent of mortgage loans are at a variable
rate. While interest rates were falling, this led to a massive
rise in sub-prime loans. The recent steady rise of interest rates,
however, is having a massive effect on the ability of low-wage
families to pay back their loans. According to the Association
of Ecuadorean Migrants in Barcelona, We have families who
are doing OK, but an increasing number are struggling.
It is a particular scandal that Spain has regularly overbuilt
houses in the private sector under conditions of a major shortage
of affordable housing in the public sector.
According to official figures produced in December 2006, some
20 percent of Spaniards live below the poverty line. The majority
of homes in the rental sector are in private hands. Just 2 percent
of dwellings are classified as social housing, compared to 10-30
percent in other EU countries.
See Also:
Spanish protests demand
affordable housing
[30 October 2006]
Marbella construction
scandal exposes endemic criminality of Spanish capitalism
[17 October 2006]
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