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  • We are here this evening with the one of the partners of NewEstate, Christophe Gater

  • Good evening Mr Gater.

  • So, to begin. What are the price trends you are currently seeing?

  • What can you say about the market?

  • Of course it depends upon which part of the market you are focussing on

  • every area has a different dynamic,

  • but generally it is good news.

  • If we take Sofia for example and follow the national statistics,

  • these suggest that we have had a 6% rise in the past year,

  • this year so far does not suggest anything different.

  • In reality, actually, in some specific areas we have actually seen increases up to 20% and even slightly more.

  • We as a company have experienced specific cases where

  • we are actually selling property, not just advertising it

  • not just talking about it,

  • real sales in some parts of Sofia up by as much as that.

  • But in other areas, unfortunately in rural areas it is not true.

  • That’s a very different market, a very specific market,

  • it is a completely different case.

  • And what about the holiday market?

  • The holiday market is really very different.

  • A different segment?

  • Yes, it is, it is not driven by domestic demand.

  • If we look at the Sofia market, Plovidiv, Varna,

  • these are largely of domestic demand.

  • In areas such as Sunny beach,

  • it is still largely foreign money.

  • and therefore is effected by different influences.

  • There we have a more complicated structure

  • where, again in Sunny Beach, there are a lot of Russian owners

  • Those owners mostly bought between 4-5 years ago,

  • they bought in Roubles, which are now half the value of what they were

  • and therefore their Euros investment has effective doubled.

  • That doubling of their invested value

  • means that they can now afford to sell

  • at an enormous profit,

  • undercutting, perhaps Bulgarian owners,

  • developers or British, Irish owners

  • who are also looking to sell.

  • So, the holiday market is a very different one,

  • it is also more difficult,

  • prices there are not increasing,

  • we have many examples across the board.

  • of the opposite of that.

  • Is the property market really getting better, like everyone thinks?

  • I genuinely believe that it is getting better,

  • but of course it depends which perspective you are coming from:

  • if you are consumer looking to buy a property

  • I think you are going to find a lot more choice

  • on the Bulgarian market, now, by comparison to previously.

  • I think that now, at the moment,

  • 80-90% of stock available

  • is top floor, ground floor, damaged

  • or of poor layout, unsaleable,

  • unlivable, poor quality, which are largely overpriced.

  • Now that prices are up,

  • certainly in the domestic market,

  • let us take again Sofia for example,

  • this is where developers can profit again

  • Not quite to the extent of 7-8-9 years ago

  • but they can now profit.

  • That means that new plans

  • are coming to the market.

  • They are fortunately, I see from my experience,

  • much more functional, livable properties.

  • at more reasonable prices

  • and this is a huge improvement for the market,

  • certainly for property buyers

  • not just those seeking buy-to-let investment property,

  • but for real homes, residences,

  • and that is fundamental for any property market.

  • So, why should someone invest in Bulgaria?

  • It’s a question were often asked

  • and there isn’t any brilliant answer

  • except to say that Bulgaria still has amongst the very lowest barriers to entry

  • and this is a huge appeal factor.

  • There isn’t really anywhere else that you can realistically say

  • with strong governance, within the European Union,

  • that is politically stable, relatively speaking, globally speaking.

  • What about the corruption!?

  • Of course the corruption plays a role in people’s decision making,

  • but when you are looking on a global scale

  • and you have 25,000 Euros to invest,

  • I think youll find it very difficult to find a place

  • to invest that kind of money

  • where you are going to get at 10% gross rental yield,

  • and a 5% net return, from that level of investment.

  • You will have other options of course, gold, shares, whatever it might be

  • but property is tangible, something owners can use,

  • so if you are in the market at this level

  • Bulgaria is still one of your only and best options.

  • So, from a barriers to entry perspective I still think that is one of its key strong points

  • Are foreign investor distorting the market?

  • I don’t think there is enough of them to distort the market.

  • Foreign Direct Investment in property is massively reduced

  • by comparison to what it once was.

  • However, as with the example that I gave earlier,

  • of with Russian investment and currency fluctuation,

  • that is certainly causing distortion.

  • What I would say, where there is substantial change

  • and growth in the market is in the rental sector,

  • where for example we have foreign money coming into the country pushing new products,

  • particularly in the shared economy,

  • where you now have websites such as airbnb,

  • representing 190 countries providing a new way of renting your property,

  • which is opening opportunity to a lot of people

  • other websites such as Arendoo.com

  • offering similar service in Bulgaria specifically

  • and this is something that is allowing Bulgarian owners

  • to actually utilise property, which is perhaps not being used,

  • to gain an income from it.

  • And also, it is allowing people to go on holiday,

  • or make a city break or a weekend stay

  • much more affordable for them.

  • So the foreign money that we see being involved

  • in the market isn’t necessarily in bricks and mortar,

  • there is actually a lot more going into cyberspace investment than meets the eye.

  • How about the interest rates in the market, how are they effecting the market?

  • Unmistakably, a huge difference.

  • We saw a 7 month period after the collapse of KTB bank,

  • and particularly when the government's guaranteed amounts were paid out to depositors,

  • we felt this was a bubble

  • because we could see the same repetition of buyers using cash,

  • which was always previously the main purchasing power for the Bulgarian market,

  • but now, I would say, 12 months on

  • that's not the case

  • 80-75% of our buyers are young professionals,

  • buying with mortgage backed purchasing power.

  • With interest rates now below 5% the average employed person,

  • we are seeing that across our thousands of tenants that we deal with,

  • those tenants are less interested in renewing their rental contracts

  • and more interested in actually looking at mortgage options

  • to buy a property from us.

  • So, those interest rates are a huge factor.

  • So, we are not in a bubble?

  • I don’t think we are in a bubble.

  • I think the current demand is sustainable, highly sustainable,

  • I don’t believe that foreign money is the major driving factor.

  • The developers are making now normal profits,

  • we are not seeing anyone making 300-400% gains,

  • that was always an artificial business,

  • from which developers benefited a lot, of course no one is against making profit,

  • but on those gross levels it was always unsustainable,

  • especially when being sold on false rental returns, largely to foreigners.

  • Now we are looking at young, educated, professional Bulgarians

  • taking loans from Bulgarian banks, to buy their first homes,

  • sometimes with family help, sometimes without.

  • But importantly this is a new demand that will be here for the foreseeable future.

  • These people have already decided they are not going abroad, its Bulgarian money,

  • invested into Bulgarian properties, so it is sustainable.

  • One final question, what about the future?

  • Well, its truly the million dollar question!

  • We are still here, we still believe in it,

  • of course we are not just invested in the Bulgarian market,

  • but I still think that the Bulgarian market has plenty to give.

  • Prices are certainly not all they once were,

  • and you could say that they gives hope,

  • there is still a chance to get there again

  • and even if that isn’t possible we are still looking at a profitable ride.

  • I would prefer to see based on much more sustainable basis.

  • I think the Bulgarian market has plenty to offer,

  • but I also think this may not necessarily be for the classic international investor,

  • maybe not for international funds,

  • but on a domestic level there is money to be made

  • and its for the long-term, it is not a flash in a pan.

  • Christophe Gater, partner at NewEstate, thank you very much.

We are here this evening with the one of the partners of NewEstate, Christophe Gater

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ブルームバーグのインタビュー「ニューエステート・ブルガリア」:ブルガリアの不動産市場は新たなバブルに突入か? (Bloomberg interviews New Estate Bulgaria: Is the Bulgarian property market entering a new bubble?)

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    哈維 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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