Iceland review - 2019, Side 65

Iceland review - 2019, Side 65
61 Iceland Review stykkishólmur flatey brjánslækur landeyjahöfn vestmannaeyjar reykjavík ísafjörður höfn vík egilsstaðir akureyri VIKINGSUSHI ADVENTURE NATURE, BIRDLIFE AND SCALLOP TASTING ON SEA SEATOURS.IS were scheduled to be added by 2021. At the same time, large investors, who had jumped into tourism despite little if any experience in the industry, have been pulling out of the hotel market. Building more hotels is also crucial to relieve one of the greatest pressures on the housing market: short-term tourist rentals through booking sites like Airbnb. Airbnb nation The 2010-2018 tourism boom would never have materialised had it not been for Airbnb rentals, which soaked up the excess demand for accommo- dation. The number of short-term tourist rentals in the capital region more than doubled between 2016 and 2018, from 2,032 to 4,154. A 2019 study commissioned by the City of Reykjavík found that a remarkable 5% of the housing stock of the metropolitan area was listed on Airbnb, including as much as 70% of apartments on certain streets in Reykjavík. Icelandic Airbnb hosts could also charge some of the highest rents in the world, the “typical income” of local hosts in 2017 being $11,300 (€10,108), according to data from Airbnb. The impact on housing costs and rental prices has therefore been significant. A 2018 study by econ- omists at the Central Bank of Iceland found that Airbnb was responsible for 15% of the increase in real estate prices in 2015-2017. The impact on the rental market has been even more dramatic, especially in central parts of Reykjavík, where small, affordable rental apart- ments became nearly impossible to find. The aver- age rental price for a one-bedroom apartment in downtown Reykjavík is now $1,600-1,700 (€1,430- 1,520), having risen by more than 95% since 2011. While new, stricter regulations on short-term tourist rentals announced in 2018 have helped curb the negative effect of Airbnb on the rental market, market forces should also help relieve the pressure by returning apartments to the rental market. A silver lining in the bankruptcy of WOW air? The bankruptcy of Icelandic low-cost airline WOW air in March should speed up this process. Data from Statistics Iceland reveals that the 15% drop in visitor numbers between June 2018 and June 2019, largely due to the bankruptcy of WOW, was not as severe a blow to the economy as many had feared, leading to just a 1% decrease in tourist spending. Two factors could explain this remarkable state of affairs. On the one hand, WOW air, as a low-cost airline, catered more to budget travellers than its main competitor, Icelandair. On the other hand, a weaker króna has encouraged travellers to spend more. The impact on Airbnb stays has been far more dramatic. While stays at hotels and guesthouses dropped 5% between June 2018 and June 2019, over- night stays in Airbnb accommodation has dropped by 29%. According to the July housing market report by the Housing Financing Fund, this drop has yet to be translated into effects on the housing market, but investors I spoke to agree this will likely change in the fall, as investors list Airbnb apart- ments for sale or long-term rental after the peak tourism season ends. “People who bought apart- ments to rent out to tourists are getting tired of all the work involved, the driving between apartments to change sheets and towels. This work has not been made easier by the new regulations, and many inves- tors who bought these apartments in 2015 are now more than happy to cash in on the price increases.” A hard landing averted Returning a few thousand Airbnb properties to the market could help alleviate some of the pres- sure on renters, but ultimately, the problem facing the metropolitan property market will only be solved with more construction. A government task force recently found that the overhang of unmet demand is still between 5,000-8,000 apartments. The annual long-term need for new apartments, due to population growth and other demographic changes, is at least 1,400 apartments. Data from the Housing Financing Fund sug- gests we might come close to meeting this need in the coming years. The fund estimates that 3,000 apartments will be completed this year, and another 7,000 by 2021. Crucially, the most dangerous threat to home- owners and first-time homebuyers appears to have been averted. The tourism boom, unlike the banking boom of the 2000s, did not evolve into a massive property bubble, and despite a crash land- ing for one of Iceland’s two major airlines, a hard landing for the housing market was averted. A 2019 study commissioned by the City of Reykjavík found that a remarkable 5% of the housing stock of the metropolitan area was listed on Airbnb, including as much as 70% of apartments on certain streets in Reykjavík.
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