Brendan Burgess
Founder
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- 54,801
As it looks increasingly likely that NAMA will come into being, it’s time to discuss how NAMA will manage its portfolio of loans and underlying properties. I can't find anything written on the topic online apart from this article back in May by Bill Nowlan.
The big problem for NAMA is that they can’t just wait for the market to recover as NAMA is the biggest player in the market. Its strategy and actions will determine how the market performs, in Ireland at least.
They will be able to get rid of their overseas properties without disrupting local markets and presumably they should do that to reduce the overall level of borrowings.
If they wait for ten or fifteen years for prices to increase by 10%, the property market will be subdued for ten or fifteen years waiting for the properties to be released onto the market.
The big problem is the oversupply of property especially housing. There are two types of oversupply. There are housing estates in parts of Ireland which will never be occupied, no matter how low the prices of these houses are. But oversupply of apartments in Dublin 4 can be fixed by lowering the selling prices.
Some development land will never be developed and it should be sold back into the market for agricultural use – possibly with a clause preventing any development on the land for 20 years.
People are reluctant to invest in property now as the future is uncertain. Banks are unwilling to lend although this may change after they get rid of their bad loans.
Could the government help with some form of tax relief for long term purchasers of NAMA development land? Say a fund is set up like a forestry fund. It would not be allowed develop the land for at least 10 years, but any development profits then would be tax-free. The fund might buy other assets which it would commit to holding for 15 years to take them off the market. These other assets would provide the fund with an income. In principle, I am against interfering in the property market, but these are unprecedented problems.
Does anyone know how other asset management agencies dealt with the problem?
The big problem for NAMA is that they can’t just wait for the market to recover as NAMA is the biggest player in the market. Its strategy and actions will determine how the market performs, in Ireland at least.
They will be able to get rid of their overseas properties without disrupting local markets and presumably they should do that to reduce the overall level of borrowings.
If they wait for ten or fifteen years for prices to increase by 10%, the property market will be subdued for ten or fifteen years waiting for the properties to be released onto the market.
The big problem is the oversupply of property especially housing. There are two types of oversupply. There are housing estates in parts of Ireland which will never be occupied, no matter how low the prices of these houses are. But oversupply of apartments in Dublin 4 can be fixed by lowering the selling prices.
Some development land will never be developed and it should be sold back into the market for agricultural use – possibly with a clause preventing any development on the land for 20 years.
People are reluctant to invest in property now as the future is uncertain. Banks are unwilling to lend although this may change after they get rid of their bad loans.
Could the government help with some form of tax relief for long term purchasers of NAMA development land? Say a fund is set up like a forestry fund. It would not be allowed develop the land for at least 10 years, but any development profits then would be tax-free. The fund might buy other assets which it would commit to holding for 15 years to take them off the market. These other assets would provide the fund with an income. In principle, I am against interfering in the property market, but these are unprecedented problems.
Does anyone know how other asset management agencies dealt with the problem?