Paris Real Estate Prices Expected To Level Out

After falling 3% to start the year, experts believe that the Paris real estate market should flatten out for the remainder of 2012. Due to changes to the …

After falling 3% to start the year, experts believe that the Paris real estate market should flatten out for the remainder of 2012. Due to changes to the Capital Gains Tax, many buyers decided to sell their homes earlier in the year – this sell off was blamed for the price drop. Now that it is over, it is expected that prices should level out. For more on this, continue reading the following article from Property Wire.

The residential property market in Paris is expected to be flat during the rest of 2012 after a mad rush at the beginning of the year due to new capital gains tax rules.

January was an extremely busy month for the market as sellers rushed to beat the new legislation and buyers snapped up good deals but since then the property market in Paris has slowed down considerably, according to a new report.

Stock levels have fallen and a two tier market is emerging once again, as prime property sells but everything else is sticking on the market, says the report from property company Lonres.

With the deadline for the changes to Capital Gains Tax (CGT) legislation on 01 February 2012 looming, there was a real sense of urgency for vendors to sell in January. This resulted in a higher than average volume of instructions being recorded for the time of year. Buyers took advantage of the increase in stock levels, combined with low mortgage and interest rates, by putting in reduced offers. This resulted in a slight decrease in prices of 3%.

Claim up to $26,000 per W2 Employee

  • Billions of dollars in funding available
  • Funds are available to U.S. Businesses NOW
  • This is not a loan. These tax credits do not need to be repaid
The ERC Program is currently open, but has been amended in the past. We recommend you claim yours before anything changes.

Since the passing of the CGT legislation deadline, activity levels in the Parisian market have quietened down dramatically. Stock levels have fallen considerably and the market has returned to how it was prior to the changes.

Buyers are found for quality prime stock in the right locations but non-prime stock is proving harder to sell and is once again tending to stick on the market. ‘This is resulting in a distinct two tier market re-emerging. Buyers are still dictating the market and once a property is at the right price it does sell,’ said director of the firm’s French operation, Laurent Lakatos.

The recent Presidential elections meant that the property market in France, including Paris, slowed as people sat tight and waited and see what happens. ‘We expect that the residential market in Paris will be fairly flat for the rest of the year and we may even see falls in the region of 1% to 5%,’ explained Lakatos.

He explained that central Paris has a very different demand base to that of central London. The majority of the prime Parisian market is driven by wealthy French nationals. Presently, many are investing in property in Paris as a means to exit the stock market and to place cash during the Eurozone Crisis.

International buyers are far less prevalent in Paris. The number of multi-national companies with offices in Paris has fallen in recent years and as a result so too have the number of expats.
 
‘Investing in residential property in Paris is also unattractive to international investors as there is so much red tape involved, no tax loopholes to exploit and tenants are legally very well protected. A few trophy properties are purchased by very wealthy overseas buyers, typically Russian or Chinese, but are either used as second homes or left empty for capital growth purposes,’ said Lakatos.

‘The Paris market is also not influenced in any significant way by bonus payouts. Although some firms do pay bonuses they are generally of a much smaller magnitude and less widespread than London employees and therefore their impact is far less reaching,’ he pointed out.

The funding profile of buyers in the last quarter of 2011 is likely to have been fairly evenly spilt between cash and those taking out a mortgage. ‘In France, it is more appealing to buyers to take out a mortgage rather than pay with cash, even if they can afford to do so. This is because the focus of French mortgages is to repay the capital and therefore it becomes cheaper to take out a mortgage and borrow money than pay in cash due to the effects of inflation,’ he added.

This article was republished with permission from Property Wire.

advertisement

Does Your Small Business Qualify?

Claim Up to $26K Per Employee

Don't Wait. Program Expires Soon.

Click Here

Share This:

In this article