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A Comment on Property Values
Written
by: Mexico Insight
Published:
Thursday, December 9, 2010 |
Mexico’s
realty market has not escaped the world-wide downturn in property prices, which
has been led in good part by the contraction of available mortgage credit and
falling stock market values. However, Mexico’s downturn has not been as
deep or as severe as the one in the USA, and much less so than in places like
Spain—and there are specific reasons for that.
Mexico’s
property ‘boom’ was never as large as that of its US neighbor, or its former
colonial master. Credit has become widely available to the middle and upper
classes in Mexico—but mostly in the form of consumer credit: plastic cards and
loans for new cars. Mortgages were virtually unavailable in Mexico before the
1990’s, and once they appeared mortgage interest rates have never been low.
Even today, the best deals on the market demand interest rates of around 11%
per annum and, when you add account aperture fees, commissions, and required
minimum deposits of 15-25%, the market of potential mortgage holders diminishes
further. Extremely low interest rate mortgage loans, “teaser” rates, no-fee
arrangements, etc. never came to pass in Mexico.
Residential
building projects aimed at foreign investors did flourish in Mexico starting in
the 90’s—but never on the scale that they did in Spain. The Spanish realty
market, fueled by cheap money from the Euro zone and Britain (Germans
and Brits were principal buyers there), boomed and developers obliged by
throwing up apartment blocks as fast as they could mix the cement, and as if
tomorrow would never come. Today it’s reported that there are some 800,000
(eight hundred thousand) residential dwelling units in Spain lying empty,
unsold, or weighing down on bank’s repo inventories.
Mexico
has experienced property booms and busts of its own. However, it was not a
contraction of credit that caused its housing busts, but macroeconomic issues
related to the structure of its economy and the value of its currency. Since
Mexico floated its currency in
the mid 90’s, the peso has enjoyed remarkable stability. The most recent
property ‘bubbles’ in Mexico have been brought about by cheap dollars funding
property in Mexico (usually through remortgages on foreign property) and more
often, foreigners trading down in their home country and using the surplus cash
to buy land or a small home in Mexico. Moreover, these ‘bubbles’ have been
localized in their nature. For example, small rural towns whose local economies
would never have supported steep rises in land and property values, were
‘discovered’ by foreigners and experienced unprecedented levels of foreign
property investment; and even well-known coastal areas—Puerto Vallarta is a
prime example—experienced truly massive capital inflows which drove realty
prices upwards.
Many
of these purchases were left largely unaffected by the credit crisis, because
the sales were completed using monies which had been generated from the sale of
assets abroad, i.e., many of the properties owned by foreigners here are not
mortgaged. The peak in prices came at the point just before the market turned
sour in the USA; which also marks the point when capital inflows destined for
Mexican residential properties, principally derived from foreign asset sales,
began to decline.
The
corollary is a re-balancing process that is happening now, but what
is not being seen here is the wholesale collapse of the Mexican property
market—and that’s in good part because owners are not being forced to bring
about stressed sales and the rental markets here remain buoyant.
The latest situation does, however, require existing owners—and prospective new
owners—to take a long-term approach in regard to their residential property
investments here. If you enter the market now hoping to sell for a profit in a
year or two, you’re probably going to be left disappointed.
Mexican
real estate continues to offer excellent value for money—especially along the
coasts. In the USA, coastal property markets are effectively closed to all but
the wealthy, whereas in Mexico you can still buy coastline property for under
US$300,000. And further inland, in Mexico’s colonial towns and cities, prices
remain very affordable and you can pick up a small home in need of some care
for less than US$50,000. Prices are in flux and, as we have commented before, the price of
Mexican property is a very localized matter and dependent more upon what a
seller demands and what a purchaser is willing to pay, and far less upon any
official data and statistics.
There
is another important reason why Mexican property remains an attractive
investment: the total cost of ownership remains very low. Property taxes, even
with recent rises, remain significantly and materially lower in Mexico than
they are in places like the USA, Canada and Western Europe. Property
construction costs are low, and ongoing maintenance costs are low, too. Ed
Kunze’s eBook, Build or Buy Your Home
in Mexico, demonstrates in great detail how this is so, and how you can get
so much more for every dollar invested in Mexican property.