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Madrid Home Prices Rising In Contrast To Other European Cities

Madrid Home Prices Rising In Contrast To Other European Cities

BY Realty Plus
Published - Saturday, 17 Jun, 2023
Madrid Home Prices Rising In Contrast To Other European Cities

Madrid home prices are rising in contrast to most other major cities in Europe, a sign of a housing crunch.

Residential real estate prices in Madrid climbed 4.9% in May from a year ago. Rising interest rates and declining consumer spending power have led to declines in five out of the eight cities monitored by the measure of urban housing markets, but housing shortages in cities like Madrid are keeping pressure on the market.

Milan and London have also seen year-on-year increases of 3.6% and 1.1%, respectively. Listing prices in Vienna continue to tumble, down 12.7% in the latest data from Immopreise. In Madrid, the persistent increases are a sign of a worsening housing shortage, which is squeezing consumers already contending with inflation and higher financing costs. The issue has become a political problem for Sanchez, as he faces voters in a snap election on July 23.

“In the case of Madrid, we’ve seen two phenomena: touristification and gentrification,” said Irene Lebrusan, a Harvard-educated expert in urban sociology and a researcher at the International Centre on Aging. “Families have to compete with investment funds or foreign investors. Housing is still looked at as an investment, not as a good that has a social function.”

Sanchez’s Socialist-led administration has sought to ease the strain by passing a law in April to cap rent increases for next year at 3%. While that’s higher than the 2% limit this year, it’s still well below the rate of inflation. His government has also announced a series of public-housing policies aimed at easing the crunch, but an influx of money from overseas and a lack of new construction has kept prices rising. Caps can also have a backlash by increasing demand for rentals, while making it less desirable for developers and owners to bolster supply, according to Cristina Arias, Director of Research at Tinsa, Spain’s largest real estate appraiser.

Rent controls make it difficult for us to estimate the total return of our investments said Borja Garcia-Egotxeaga, Chief Executive Officer of Spanish homebuilder Neinor Homes SA. It’s hard for us to go to investors and discuss areas where rent caps exist.

Tight markets extend beyond the Spanish capital’s wealthy neighbourhoods. Working-class districts, including Carabanchel, Latina and Villaverde, have seen housing prices rise more than 8% from a year ago.  These districts are normally strongholds of Sanchez’s party and the left-wing Mas Madrid — now part of a new leftist alliance that includes Podemos, a governing partner. They’ve already suffered setbacks. In local elections on May 28, the conservative Partido Popular won the most votes in all of Madrid’s 21 districts.

The trend is evident across Spain. National home prices have been rising around 10% year-on-year for four months in a row, according to Fotocasa data published last week. Prices in cities such as Palma de Mallorca, Malaga and Alicante posted gains of over 17%.

Madrid has the biggest imbalance. Four out of the top five municipalities facing the most intense demand pressure are in the Madrid region and its outskirts. Housing markets, the Bank of Spain pointed to a lack of construction and an influx of migrants and foreign buyers. The lack of housing supply in major cities across Europe is countering pressure from higher interest rates. Inflation and higher financing costs is also hitting the building sector, which risks intensifying shortages in the coming years. 

Declines in Stockholm — the epicenter of the region’s real estate crisis — narrowed to 1.5% in May after exceeding 9% in recent months, amid tight supply of housing. Prices also showed signs of recovering in London, rising 1.1% compared with being flat the previous month.

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