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Virtually every country in Europe has undergone a property boom since the late 1990s with prices doubling and even tripling in some key markets. Thousands of people have grown wealthy off the unprecedented increases in property values in countries such as the United Kingdom, Ireland and Spain. More recently Baltic countries and Central and Eastern Europe have charmed investors. But a bubble emerged in many states. Historically high levels of household debt coupled with higher interest rates caused the bubble to pop in some countries in the wake of the subprime crisis and ensuing credit crunch in the United States. Though few property markets will escape the effects of a global slowdown, some experts are confident that some European countries still offer investment potential, particularly those that kept their cool during the boom years. Portugal and Germany are two possible examples of developed real estate markets that still have potential for price growth. In the eastern Mediterranean, meanwhile, Turkey and Cyprus continue to attract interest.
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Spain’s real estate boom has made the country the darling of property investors from across Europe who, since the late 1990s, have sunk billions into houses and apartments in cities and coastal areas in order to reap the benefits of double-digit price rises. But with Spanish property values now sky high and with signs emerging that the trend is cooling, other European countries are starting to look increasingly attractive for both big institutional buyers and small investors. Having benefited from the boom in Spain, many Spanish investors are now looking for somewhere else to park their money while their home market cools. |
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Spanish house prices are “overvalued” by as much as 20 percent, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) states in a new report that warns that Spain will suffer more than any other European economy from the current global real estate slump. |
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Panic selling of real estate stocks on the Madrid stock exchange on April 24 may signal the bursting of Spain’s 10-year property bubble, with construction firms, banks and the nation’s heavily indebted property owners likely to suffer. |
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Moscow and Istanbul ranked first and second, respectively, as this year’s top real estate markets in Europe for both investment and development prospects, according to the highly regarded real estate forecast Emerging Trends in Real Estate Europe 2008 published by the Urban Land Institute (ULI) and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. |
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Spanish house prices could fall by 5 percent or more next year as the country’s 10-year real estate boom ends, research by investment bank Morgan Stanley suggests. |
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