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As domestic and foreign investors seek refuge in German bricks and mortar, fears of a real estate bubble grow – By Harald Freiberger
Sometimes, Jürgen Haug can only shake his head: “Many of my customers
are currently preoccupied with just one subject: How do I get my hands
on a house quickly?” explains the investment advisor from Ismaning near
Munich.
Recently, he had yet another such customer. The man had fallen in
love with an apartment with a roof-deck and a price tag of €5,400 per square meter. The apartment would have cost him €320,000.
He had €50,000 of his own to put towards the purchase and an annual
income of €70,000. He wanted to begin by renting out the apartment
before moving in himself. “I ran some calculations with the customer and
luckily managed to talk him out of it,” says Haug. The risk was just
too big and the financing too restricted. If even just one month’s rent
was missed, the bank might have put him under pressure to sell. The
customer’s losses would have been in the tens of thousands. Haug
suggested investment funds.
Scenes like this are currently being played out thousands of times
over in the offices of German investment advisors and real estate
agents: the battle for houses in Germany. The finance crisis has shown
that money is no longer safe in the bank, investors think. The debt
crisis has shown that state securities are no longer a safe bet. The
result is a scramble for real value: gold and real estate.
“There are strong indications that we’re at the beginning of a real
estate bubble here in Germany,” says Steffen Sebastian, Professor of
Real Estate Finance at the University of Regensburg. Interest rates are
being kept artificially low by central banks, investors don’t have
access to worthwhile forms of investment and, together with these
factors, there is anxiety about inflation. Sebastian sees great danger
in all this: “The interested parties are not generally speculators.
They’re private investors whose anxiety about their money causes them to
misjudge the risks and believe that they have to invest everything in
real estate.” They have perhaps a maximum of €100,000 and borrow
€300,000. But the result of this is an enormous concentration of risk
and high indebtedness. “That’s the opposite of security which dictates
that risk should be widely spread and debt kept to a minimum,” says the
Professor.
The situation is strained to the extent that the German central bank
recently warned of the possibility that rents will not be able to keep
up with the rapid increase in the price of real estate. That being the
case, many mortgage arrangements would collapse. The Bundesbank
registered a rise of 5.5 percent in house prices last year in large
cities. The price for newly built houses in Bavaria increased by 16
percent, according to one bank study.
The situation is being further aggravated by the deluge of money from
the European Central Bank (ECB), which has made one trillion euros
available to banks at low interest rates over a three-year period, with
the aim of easing tension in the financial markets. A portion of this
money is likely to be used by banks to offer even cheaper real estate
financing thus enticing private investors to put even more cash into
property investments. Jörg Asmussen, a member of the ECB Executive
Board, says that the situation in the real estate market should be
“closely monitored”: plain talk for a central banker.
Estate agents report that many potential purchasers are turning up to
view houses, which three years ago would have stimulated little
interest. They often feel under pressure to confirm the purchase within a
few minutes for fear that the desired real estate will otherwise be
snapped up by someone else. “Very many people forget that a piece of
real estate is a very risky investment,” says Professor Sebastian.
“Because you can see and touch a house it offers the illusion that you
can judge its value better than an intangible security.”
Foreign investors have also discovered the German real estate market.
These include wealthy private investors from crisis-hit countries like
Greece, Portugal, Spain or Italy. They aim to secure their wealth by
investing in property in northern Europe. Large investment companies
from Asia, North American or Scandinavia who lack investment
opportunities in their own regions have also entered the market. They
also see how cheap real estate in large German cities is compared with
prices in Paris or London.
In Berlin foreigners are estimated to have bought around a third of
real estate sold in 2011. Even in blighted inner-city areas such as the
Neukölln district, property is now changing hands for double the market
value. On Chamissoplatz square in the Kreuzberg district, with its
well-maintained Wilhelminian-era houses, prices have doubled in recent
years.
Hamburg is a popular port of call for Scandinavians. Real estate
buyers there think nothing of shelling out €900,000 for a 170 square
meter apartment at the Eppendorfer Baum subway station – €5,300 per
square meter. And in the affluent Hohenfelde neighborhood, prices have
increased by almost 50 percent in the last year alone. “There’s a danger
here of unleashing a price bubble,” says Sebastian. Investors expect
prices to boom even further in the next five years and are concerned to
have a stake – that’s the stuff that bubbles are made of.
The investment advisor Haug believes that prices in and around Munich
have been over-heating for some time. “I now only advise customers who
really don’t want to be talked out of it to buy a house.” Twelve years
ago the price per square meter in the Munich area was €3,500; in the
meantime, it’s risen to around €5,000. The risk that the gravy train
might soon come to a halt is high. “Prices are not increasing to the
extent that the hype always suggests,” says Haug. A 100 square meter
apartment in a Munich suburb for €500,000 – “a large sum of money like
that would have got you an entire house in a posh neighborhood not so
long ago.”
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