Iceland review - 2019, Síða 62

Iceland review - 2019, Síða 62
58 Iceland Review A glut of luxury condos A real estate investor who wished to remain anony- mous due to ongoing business relations agrees that investors and city planners made a serious miscal- culation when plans were drawn up for hundreds of expensive luxury apartments for the city center. “Most of the downtown luxury condos which have been coming onto the market or are being com- pleted have yet to find a buyer, and out of the few that have been sold many were actually sold in some larger property swaps. I’ve heard of owners who are shopping around for summer homes in exchange for these luxury flats. Investors vastly overesti- mated the market for these high-end apartments, no question.” Asking prices have also gone down by 25%, from up to ISK 1 million ($8,000/€7,150) per square metre to ISK 750,000 ($6,000/€5,350). Prices of condos in one of these projects have been slashed down to its construction costs. Spurred on by the banks, who had taken over large property portfolios following the financial crash, investors rushed to build luxury condos. “They probably thought that the safest bet was to build for people with money.” It should not come as a surprise that some of this speculative investment was financed with money which had weathered the 2008 storm in tax havens. “It’s one of the things people have been talking about. Some of these luxury apartment projects were funded with money that flowed from off shore, fortunes which former bankers and Corporate Vikings had managed to deposit in tax havens before the crash.” Despite the attention, this issue has received both in local and international media, the glut of luxury condos is not a serious problem, he tells me. “It might take years, but all of these apartments will be sold. There is no danger of any real estate standing empty in 101 Reykjavík for very long.” A bullet dodged Investors and others who are intimately familiar with the market argue that Reykjavík might have dodged a bullet on this issue. High-end real estate has become a magnet for foreign property specula- tors who have bid up housing prices in many cities around the world, creating serious property bub- bles. So far, very little if any such money has flowed into the Reykjavík market. One reason is the rapid strengthening of the Icelandic króna between 2012 and 2016, thanks to the boom in tourism, made investments in Icelandic real estate less attractive. An 8% appreciation of the króna in 2015 and a further 18.4% appreciation in 2016, the largest in Icelandic monetary history, made Reykjavík real estate less attractive to international investors. Calculated in US dollars, real estate prices in Reykjavík more than doubled between 2014 and 2017. No housing market world- wide has seen similar increases. The króna has again depreciated by more than 20% since 2017, perhaps making Reykjavík real-estate more appealing to foreign buyers, but a housing economist who spoke off the record due to contractual constraints explained that foreign real estate investors, who are primarily looking for safe investments, are wary of the kind of “instabil- ity which has characterised the Icelandic market.” Instability is perhaps too gentle a term. A few large foreign investors have entered the market, but these have by and large invested in hotels. Too many hotels? One of the most important forces driving the Icelandic property market has been tourism. In addition to luxury condos, hotels became a favou- rite of real estate investors following the crash. Many housing activists have therefore pointed to hotels as another example of warped priorities. However, the most important difference between hotels and luxury condos is that the demand for hotel rooms is very real. The growth in visitor num- bers from fewer than 500,000 in 2010 to 1.8 million in 2016 left existing hotels booked to capacity. With double-digit growth rates in the tourism industry, hotel construction was not booking on speculative future growth, but very real current demand. Some of the largest hotel projects announced in 2015-2016 have also been put on ice as banks reassess the prospects of the tourism indus- try. This includes two hotels on the outskirts of downtown Reykjavík which were set to become the largest hotels in Iceland, with some 710 rooms, nearly a third of the 2,400 new hotel rooms which “Most of the downtown luxury condos which have been coming onto the market or are being completed have yet to find a buyer. Investors vastly overestimated the market for these high-end apartments, no question.”
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