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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.

Spanish property developer debt is 324 bln euros
Friday, January 29, 2010 @ 12:46 PM

MADRID, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Spanish property developers' debts with banks at the end of September were worth around a third of the country's gross domestic product, the Spanish Mortgage Association said on Monday.

A spokeswoman said data up to the end of the third quarter showed hard hit property developers owed 324 billion euros ($458 billion) as a property crisis continued to worsen.

Property promoters have faced a torrid time since a property bubble burst in 2007.

The mortgage association said many property developers could not pay back their debts and that, in turn, was affecting the credit rating of Spanish banks which have largely emerged unscathed from a severe recession and credit crisis.

Spanish house prices fell just over six percent last year but many analysts still say the market has further to fall and data may underestimate the true scale of the slide so far. [ID:nLDE60E0VV] (Reporting by Carlos Ruano; Writing by Nigel Davies; Editing by Dan Lalor) ($1 = 0.7072 euro)

Source:  ForexYard



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Moraira Property said:
Friday, January 29, 2010 @ 12:38 PM

If these figures are to be believed then they are astonishing. This can only be a further blow to Spain's economic standing. This in conjunction with Greece’s' debt problems can only bring further downward pressure on the Euro. German central bankers have today declared that there will be no bail out for Mediterranean members of the Euro Zone. What are the alternatives? An austerity package like those currently imposed in Ireland? Or will we see a country forced to leave the Euro Zone?
Despite the German posturing I feel a classic Brussels based fudge with a combination economic support and imposed cuts in spending, cloaked under another name is most likely. I feel the power brokers in Brussels have too much personal capital invested in the united European project to let the Euro Zone crumble. We live in interesting times!


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