Surely, if the locals in Croatia cannot access mortgages easily and if foreign banks are unwilling to give mortgages on Croatian property this will mean that the market will be limited by these factors. This could mean that the second-hand market may be virtually non-existent, unless you sell to another "investor" from Ireland, England or Germany.
Builders have built too many properties in many of these areas because of the demand from foreign investors but the locals in many of these E European countries cannot afford to buy these properties. The fundamentals in these markets are not very clear and it is not a certainty that you can make gains. Some Western investors may have been remortgaging properties in the West in order to buy E European properties and they will now be begininning to find it a bit more difficult with increasing interest rates and banks strengthening their lending criteria.
If the locals cannot afford to buy these properties and the only people who can afford them are other Western "investors" then this indicates that prices are out of touch with the economic realities of the countries involved. That coupled with an oversupply indicates that the only way to sell many of these will have to be to reduce the price.
Has there been a recent restriction of foreigners buying property in Croatian 'National Park' areas? - with many areas becoming National Parks, such as some of the Islands.
Properties with local markets in eastern europe are unlikely to fall. These include the cities such as Warsaw, Prague, etc. The reason being that the local market drives these markets. Locals here are not as indeted as us in the West
Add the huge influx of people moving in and the restrictive planning regulations (like the UK) and there is a huge demand-supply imbalance.
Some people talk of a doubling in Warsaw's size of the next 10-15 years as the nation moves from an agrarian to urbanised and capitalist society.
I'm seeing a contradiction here. I'm not out to pick holes-I hope your investment stays strong for you but if there's such tight planning and lack of accomodation, how can the city expand by 100%?
One place where mega corporations WONT cut back is Hungary - where wages are uber low and where they can make significant savings by investing.
Another factor is that the Credit squeeze will likely help to cut the dead wood bad development design projects ...... only developers of note will get finance and respect - thus planning permission.
think you'll find that the official Polish Office of Statisitics shows a 3.8% unemployment rate in Warsaw.
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Also in favour of Warsaw is its current small size in % terms of country population compared to all other European capitals.
London's average salary is tiny compared to its average house price. Probably be around 10-15 times.
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