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Distressed Bulgarian Sales
With
the current
state
of the property market worldwide more or less, but particularly in
Bulgaria, there are many people desperate to sell.
The definition of distressed
property sales is the urgent sale of
assets under negative conditions or a rapid, urgent sale of assets,
often at a loss. Distressed sales usually occur when cash is needed to
cover immediate needs or debts or when someone decides they cannot
afford the property for one reason or another, for example they cannot
afford the mortgage repayments or the management charges. Or
sometimes for personal reasons such as divorce, relocation etc.
There are currently many
British and Irish desperate to sell the
apartment they bought in the Bansko or Pamporovo or Sunny Beach and
they are prepared to sell for much less money than they paid for it.
These buyers were often promised high guaranteed rental yields of 5 to
10%, which they thought would cover their yearly management fees and
mortgage repayments but have not seen a penny in rental returns. Or
they were enticed into buying 2 or 3 apartments (often by being given a
discount on the full purchase price) in the same complex and told that
the property would double in value in a couple of years. Of course the
opposite has happened.....
Over the last few months I
became interested to find an apartment along
the Black Sea coast to buy for a weekend getaway and also a ski
apartment for rental. However, apart from the odd good deal on ebay, it
was incredibly difficult to find genuine distressed and below market
value properties in Bulgaria. Sure there are numerous websites and
agencies supposedly offering distressed sales and properties below
market value, but these are still incredibly over-priced in today's
market. For example selling a large 2 bed apartment in Bansko for
40,000 Euros less than they paid for it two or three years ago, seems
at first like a definite BMV property, but
then they were completely ripped off at the time they bought and paid a
stupid price for it in the first place. Knocking a few grand off what
you paid for a property does not now make it below market value or a
distressed property when you paid double the amount it was worth when
you bought!
A quick look on a few websites
advertising 'distressed property sales'
shows a one bed furnished apartment in Bansko for 44,000 Euros -
advertised as being the original sales price......but this is hardly
below market value, let alone a distressed sale, given prices in Bansko
are down by at least 50% and had never really increased in value over
the last couple of years due to over-development. A more realistic
price for this apartment would be around 20,000 to 25,000 Euros. Bansko
was marketed as being the best up and coming ski resort, on a par with
top European resorts. This was simply all hype. The skiing and snow
cover is nowhere near the quality and quantity you get in France,
Italy, Austria or Switzerland. That would have been fine if the prices
reflected this but at the height of the boom people were paying well
over 120,000 Euros for a 2 bed apartment there and 40,000 to 50,000
Euros for a studio or small one bed. And prices for food and drink and
lift passes steadily increased until the prices were similar to what
you pay in France and Austria. I live part of the year in the largest
ski area in the world and in the most expensive department in France
outside of central Paris and you can get a studio apartment there for
60,000 Euros!
Another website that promote
themselves as offering Below Market Value
properties advertise their sales as below the 'regular' price which is
stated as meaning 20 to 50% discounted (presumably from original sales
price although on a quick glance there were none at 50% of regular
price and most were around 20 to 30% below the price paid for them).
They even state that these properties can be bought and 'flipped' for
gain - highly unlikely, if not impossible! Otherwise these sellers
would be selling these properties easily!
And of course even if you find
a really cheap property you still need
to be very careful of location. There are plenty of studio apartments
in the Sunny Beach area for under 15,000 Euros but these are in awful
developments, on the edge of the road or in the middle of nowhere.
Similarly in Bansko many apartments for sale are nowhere near the ski
lifts and town are are in fact in a field somewhere along the road to
Bansko - rental potential basically non-existant. Maybe they are
advertised as being close to the golf course but can you actually ever
use the golf course - probably not as often only those who bought into
the developments surrounding the course can use it.
As well as the financial aspect
of why peole are selling there is also
the psychological one, which I can completely emphasize with. Many
people have gone through horrible and stressful experiences to hold
title to their Bulgarian property. They may have had ongoing issues
with the developer, maybe the developer went bust and a new company
took over, they were maybe ripped off by builders, lawyers, agents
etc.......This all leads to stress and anxiety and a wish to just be
rid of the property in Bulgaria so they can close that chapter in their
life and move on. Even if this means losing thousands.
TAKING
THE HIT: An
important point to note when considering selling at a loss is the
exchange rate. Your loss might not be as bad as you are anticipating if
you are a British seller wishing to have the funds in Sterling. For
example if you paid 60,000 Euros for an apartment back in 2006, then at
the time the exchange rate was something like 1:1.45, so in sterling
the transaction cost you around £41,400. Now if you sell for
30,000 Euros in today's market, instead of taking a 50% loss in
sterling, you will actually receive £26,550, which is only a
35%
loss. Still a large blow, granted, but not as bad as it could be.
For details of distressed property for sale please see the private
sales listings on this site (see left
hand side with different price brackets).
To
be kept informed
of distressed property sales please sign up for the mailing list.
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