All EOS blogs All Spain blogs  Start your own blog Start your own blog 

Spain Real Estate News

What's really happening in the real estate world in Spain? The EOS Team are going to be keeping you up to date with everything that's happening from a market perspective.

Spain takes over struggling bank with cash injection
Saturday, July 23, 2011

(Reuters) - Struggling Spanish savings bank Caja Mediterraneo (CAM) has been granted the 2.8 billion euros it needed to stay afloat after its planned merger with sector peers folded in March, the Bank of Spain said on Friday.

State backed bank restructuring fund FROB will receive shares in CAM in exchange for the cash injection and take over management of the bank until a buyer is found.

Read more at Reuters.com



Like 0        Published at 2:33 PM   Comments (0)


Over 18,000 Spanish homes sold to overseas investors last year
Saturday, July 23, 2011

Over 18,000 Spanish homes were sold to overseas property investors last year, a new survey has revealed.

According to the annual report from the College of Registrars, homes sold to foreigners accounted for 4.45% of the total Spanish property market in 2010.

While the market is not anywhere near the levels of its pre-recession heyday, the availability of relatively cheap homes means that it has remained flat year on year, with both economic migrants and retirees flocking to popular destinations like the Costa del Sol.

Nearly a quarter of the properties were brought by British property hunters. The French accounted for 8.2% of the total sales while the Germans (7.7%), Russians (6.9%) and Italians (5.6%) made up the rest of the top five.

Read more at APlaceInTheSun.com



Like 0        Published at 2:30 PM   Comments (1)


Spanish banks H1 hit by provisions, funding rates
Saturday, July 23, 2011

MADRID, July 22 (Reuters) - First-half results at Spanish banks Caixabank , Bankinter and Popular showed the sector struggling uphill, squeezed by a property crunch while higher funding costs bite.

Popular, the biggest of Spain's mid-sized banks which only scraped through last week's European stress tests, took a 1.1 billion euros ($1.6 billion) provision while reporting profit which fell 14 percent.

The largest listed savings bank Caixabank , trading on the bourse since the start of the month, announced better results with an 11 percent rise in profit.

Shares in all three rose thanks to relief at a European Union deal on Thursday which should help stem the euro zone debt crisis and reduce funding costs.

"There is nothing really (in results) to change the view of the challenges that Spanish banks face, but they are better than expected," said Daragh Quinn, banks analyst at Nomura in London.

Progress had been made this week with the listing of savings banks Bankia and Civica , but there was still far to go, he said.

"The key issue for banks now is access to the funding market for the next 6 months. It's looking better today than it has been for a while (because of lower bond market rates), but let's see how it pans out."

Provisions for bad debt at Caixabank were up 18.7 percent, and the bank used most of a 463 million euro one-off gain for an extraordinary writedown.

Higher provisioning is likely to continue in the domestic business of Spain's biggest banks, Santander and BBVA , due to report on July 27 and 28 respectively.

Santander, the euro zone's largest bank, now has most of its business outside Spain and has hoovered up weaker banks before and during the crisis. But it still has work to do.

"Loss recognition in Spain is overdue and vital. Both (BBVA and Santander) will have to deal with ... real estate problems in Spain where we consider they should increase their provisioning levels to more realistic levels," analysts at JP Morgan Cazenove said in a July 21 research note.

Read more at Reuters.com



Like 0        Published at 2:28 PM   Comments (0)


Fighting Spain's Soaring Eviction Rate with Sit-Ins
Friday, July 22, 2011

Members of Afectados X la Hipoteca (Mortgage Victims Platform) shout slogans during a protest to stop the eviction of an unemployed woman and her two children, one of whom is disabled, in Madrid July 6, 2011

In the end, Maria José del Coto's reprieve lasted just two weeks. On July 6, a few hundred protesters had formed a protective human barrier around her building, preventing a judicial team from evicting her from the home in which she has lived for the past 25 years. But on Wednesday, when the protesters tried the same tactic, they discovered that police had beaten them to the punch. Showing up earlier than the demonstrators for the 9:30am eviction, about 50 officers blocked access to del Coto's apartment to all but the court officials. By 10am, the 53-year-old and her two adult children, one of them disabled, were on the street. "It's just cruel," said one of the protesters, Javier Garcia, in disgust. "She loses her home, and she's still in debt. What's wrong with this country?"

Among the many symptoms of Spain's prolonged economic crisis is a startling rise in the number of foreclosures, most of them born of an unemployment rate — Europe's highest — that currently tops out at 21.3%. In the first trimester alone of this year, there have been 15,546 evictions, a 36.8% increase over the same period in 2010. So frequent have they become in Madrid that the number of courtrooms in the city dedicated to hearing foreclosure cases has more than doubled, from six to 13. But with the evictions has come a wave of popular efforts to halt them, some of which have proven successful — at least temporarily.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2084635,00.html#ixzz1SpjY0W9p
 



Like 0        Published at 3:47 PM   Comments (0)


Spam post or Abuse? Please let us know




This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse you are agreeing to our use of cookies. More information here. x