Funny
isn't it? – every time I listen to the radio I hear how much better
things are getting – Europe improving etc. All the more reason to go to war, I suppose.
The
Next Shoe To Drop In France
Wolf
Richter
18
January, 2013
France’s
economic foundations are cracking. Unemployment hit 10.5% and is
incessantly rising. The private sector is becoming comatose. Car
sales sank 13.9%
in 2012, from a lousy 2011; sales by its native automakers plunged
even more: PSA PeugeotCitroën down 16.6%, Renault Group down 19.8%.
Now home
sales are
grinding to a halt. And the finger-pointing has already started.
In
the lofty realm of apartments in Paris that are valued at €2
million or higher—€2 million doesn’t buy all that much in Paris
anymore—a game of chicken is apparently transpiring. The number of
transactions crashed
by 42% in
2012.
Barnes,
a British real estate group that specializes in high-end properties
in France and certain tony locations elsewhere, based its study on
data gleaned from lawyers (notaires)
who engage in real estate transactions. Prices of high-end homes in
Paris dropped by 10-15%. For properties under €2 million,
transactions screeched lower by 28%, but prices remained stable.
The
study blames “the confluence of the euro crisis, the elections, and
taxation.” Harsh words.
“Elections,”
of course, refers to the events last summer that elevated Socialist
François Hollande to President of France and that put the Socialist
Party in control of parliament. “Taxation” refers to the layers
of new taxes that they have since proposed, debated, and passed,
though one of them, the 75%-income-tax bracket, has been knocked out
in court (a more legally acceptable version may soon rise from the
ashes).
For
the rich, the climate has become hostile, the rhetoric poisonous. So
they’re bailing outen
masse,
and not just the super-rich [here is one of my posts on that lurid
topic.... “Trench
Warfare” Or “Civil War” Over Confiscatory Taxes In France].
These unfortunate circumstances—the rich bailing out—”incited
sellers to speed up the process of putting properties on sale, just
when there are few buyers,” Barnes reported gloomily.
Optimism
is hissing out of the French real estate bubble. For 2013, Barnes
sees a market that remains “hesitant” during the first quarter of
2013, “with a low level of transactions,” that would gradually
recover, somehow, with a “slow correction in prices”—rather
than a sudden correction, or a crash even. Other industry insiders
see darker clouds on the horizon.
“Sellers
still haven’t understood that they have to lower their asking
prices drastically, even though prices in Paris have already fallen
more than 10%,” said Philippe Chevalier, CEO ofEmile
Garcin,
another high-end real estate outfit. He blamed foreign buyers, or
rather the sudden scarcity thereof—foreign,
because few French can still afford to buy a nice home in their
capital. They’ve been effectively priced out of the market. But
foreign buyers have gotten cold feet, he said, due to the
“accumulation of tax pressures on real estate.”
And
not just in Paris. In the “provinces”—outside the metro area of
Paris—sales of existing homes during the third quarter plummeted
20% year over year, accelerating from the 16% decline of the second
quarter (PDF,
released January 10). And new homes sales in France plunged 25% in
the third quarter, a dizzying acceleration from the second quarter’s
14% decline.
Yet,
prices in France, at least in the third quarter last year, haven’t
budged much to the downside as sellers are still clinging to the
hope—proven illusory in every real-estate bust so far—that this
too shall pass. And despite mortgage rates that averaged 3.31% in
November over an average term of 208 months, home mortgage
originations plunged 32.6% from prior year.
The Economist stuck
its finger into it—with a study of international real estate
prices. It wasn’t aimed at France directly, unlike some of its
other articles. But it hit France over the head.
The
study used two measures and compared them to averages going back to
1975: the price-to-rent ratio and the
price-to-disposable-income-per-capita ratio. It found that French
real estate was massively overvalued: by 50% based on the
price-to-rent ratio, behind Canada (78%), Hong Kong, (69%), and
Singapore (57%); and by 35%, based on disposable income, just ahead
of Canada (34%). It made France the
most overvalued real
estate market in the world based on disposable income, and the
fourth most overvalued one
based on rents.
Overvalued housing in a teetering economy: bon
appétit.
And
so, Hollande and Prime Minister Ayrault have become more unpopular
than ever before. But the poll was shoved into the background by
France’s bombing campaign in Mali—which released an avalanche of
positive comments and support from all sides, at least in France.
With impeccable timing. Read.... A
War to Rescue the French Government’s from its Descent into
Unpopularity Hell
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