articles | 20 February 2016

Property on the up

As Cyprus heads out of the bailout programme the fall in property prices is bottoming out according to data from the Central Bank of Cyprus residential property prices index (RPPI).

The RPPI recorded a decrease of only 0.3% compared with the previous period in the third quarter of 2015.

Two districts have seen the beginnings of recovery, with prices increasing in the third quarter by 1.2% for Larnaca and 0.2% for Paphos.

“The decrease in prices of houses and apartments price is slowing down,” Antonis Loizou, member of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), told the press.

On an annual basis, however, prices are still down. Overall real-estate prices dropped year on yearby 3.7% in the third quarter, down from 5% in the second quarter and 6.5% in the first.

The least affected was Famagusta, with a year-on-year fall of 1.6%. Prices in Paphos dropped by 2.5%, in Larnaca by 3%, in Limassol by 3.9% and in Nicosia by 5.1%.

According to Loizou, offices in prime locations and projects in touristic area seem to have suffered the least during the market crash that has seen overall prices tumble 31% since their 2008 peak.

“Of course these are only a small fraction of the market,” he points out.

Bargains to be had

British expats who used to buy new housing in Cyprus are now looking to buy re-sales.

“Especially in the Paphos area one can find a real bargain prices for a holiday home,” Loizou said. On the other hand, prices for agriculture land and plots is still in decline, driven by the limited demand.

“They are the ones that have been affected the most,” Loizou says.

With banks lowering interest rates from around 5% to 3%, this could help the market rebound. However, the problem with lending is that, despite the fact that it has become cheaper, mortgage availability has become tighter as well.

“With the new regulations, it’s really difficult for banks to give loans even to good customers that have never failed to repay,” a financial services professional told the Cyprus Weekly.

Source: InCyprus

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