Brazil Real Estate More Affordable Thanks To Currency Rates

As the Brazilian Real weakens against the US Dollar and the British Sterling, real estate in the country is now more affordable. In the summer of last year, …

As the Brazilian Real weakens against the US Dollar and the British Sterling, real estate in the country is now more affordable. In the summer of last year, an investor could get 1.56 Reals for each USD, and now they can get around 2. That means a house that cost 200,000 Reals last year would have cost $128,205 USD – now it would only be $100,000. For more on this, continue reading the following article from Property Wire.

The strength of Sterling against the Brazilian Real means that for British buyers property in Brazil is even more affordable, it is claimed.

Sterling is trading at a two and a half year high against the Brazilian Real and this means that if you bought a five star two bedroom beachfront apartment south of Natal on 01 June 2011 it would have cost £111,617 but now the cost is £90,564, according to Samantha Gore, sales manager of Brazil specialist estate agents uv10.

‘From early June 2011 until now the Brazilian Real has been fading against the Pound, to the tune of 28%. Likewise, the US Dollar is at a two and a half year high and the Euro a two year high against Brazil’s currency,’ she said.

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She pointed out that a very attractive Brazil property buying scenario has come about by the retreat of the Real. The Eurozone collapse has sent shockwaves over to Brazil as investors fear that demand for this Latin American nation’s exports could drop sharply as an at least partial Eurozone breakup becomes increasingly likely.

Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega is pleased that the Real is losing value and therefore becoming more competitive. ‘The weak real is beneficial for the Brazilian economy because it makes Brazilian products more competitive, which means that Brazilian industry can better compete with imported products that become more expensive, and can export more,’ he said recently.

Gore believes that optimism in Brazil extends further. ‘The middle class continues to grow, fuelling demand for property and keeping prices on an upward trajectory, at least for a few more years. Benchmark interest rates have just been lowered to 9%, which is great news for local buyers eyeing a mortgage and developers seeking finance for new projects,’ she explained.

‘In 2014, the FIFA World Cup comes to Brazil and then Rio de Janeiro takes on Olympic hosting duties in 2016. Once these events have passed, there will still be huge oil exploration to keep Brazil in the spotlight and in the money. Meanwhile tourist arrivals continue to rise, further fuelling the country’s economy which managed 2.75% GDP growth in 2011,’ she added.

Figures also show that last year Brazil welcomed a record number of visitors. Ministry of Tourism data shows there were 5.4 million visitors, 5.3% up on 2010’s figures. Best Western International has responded by opening its 17th hotel in Brazil, but the first from its Best Western Premier brand, the five star Best Western Premier Majestic Ponta Negra Beach, one the most famous beaches in Brazil.
 
Best Western International aims to have 20 hotels in Brazil by 2017 and Marriott is also adding 12 hotels to its five existing properties in Brazil as it predicts a hotel room shortage throughout the sporting events calendar.

Gore pointed out that two bedroom properties at Golden Fields, Natal, start from around £48,800.

This article was republished with permission from Property Wire.

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