Bob van den Bichelaer, director of Middelland Croatia, on BNR News Radio


Bob van den Bichelaer, director of Middelland Croatia, was interviewed on Dutch main news radio channel BNR. The interview follows up on the Sunday 22nd referendum where the Croatian people voted 'Yes' to the EU. Middelland has been active for 7 years on bridging the gap between investors in Europe, especially The Netherlands and Belgium, and the Croatian real estate market. The referendum is the most important step so far towards EU entry and will open the real estate market further to direct foreign investment.

click here to listen the interview:

Bob van den Bichelaer, directeur van Middelland Kroatië, werd geïnterviewd op BNR news radio. Het interview volgt op het  referendum van afgelopen zondag, waarin het Kroatische volk 'ja' gestemd heeft voor de EU. Middelland werkt al 7 jaar  aan het overbruggen van de kloof tussen de beleggers in Europa, vooral Nederland en België, en de Kroatische onroerend goed markt. Het referendum is de belangrijkste stap tot nu toe in de richting van toetreding tot de EU. Het zet de onroerend goed markt verder open voor directe buitenlandse investeringen.

Klik hier om hier het interview te beluisteren:
http://www.bnr.nl/?service=player&type=archief&fragment=20120127130300600

CEE property investment doubles year-on-year

Wednesday 25 January 2012
Commercial property investment volumes in Central and Eastern Europe
(CEE) reached more than €11.2 billion by the end of December 2011 –
twice the volume when compared to 2010, according to the latest data
from CBRE.

Prime yields are expected to remain solid in markets such as Poland and
the Czech Republic.
Significant deal flow in Russia during December 2011 pushed CEE property
investment volumes over the €10 billion mark, which resulted in the
third strongest year in CEE history. The strong finish in the final
quarter of 2011 (Q4 2011) confirms the expectations CBRE had at the
start of December that several pending transactions would close by the
year-end. Of particular note was the closing of the Galeria center, a
large mall in St. Petersburg, for over €800 million.

Low levels of property investment activity were recorded in South
Eastern Europe (SEE), with Serbia and Ukraine not seeing a single
institutional transaction during 2011. However, increased investment
activity has been visible in the Hungarian and Slovak commercial real
estate investment markets in recent months.

This trend is likely to continue, especially in Budapest, since the core
segment of the market has remained mostly illiquid thus far and occupier
market fundamentals have remained occupier friendly. In total,
investment volumes in Hungary increased from around €180 million in 2010
to over €600 million in 2011.

Patrick O'Gorman, Director of CEE Capital Markets, CBRE, commented:
"There is some willingness to invest in Hungary, despite recent
increasing unrest in the country, but it remains to be seen how this
trend will continue with current negotiations with the International
Monetary Fund underway and limited financing available.

"Refinancing of current loan agreements and potential partnerships
between owners and opportunistic investors may lead to further deal flow
in 2012."

Despite the fact that in some Western European markets yields have
turned the corner, prime yields are expected to remain solid in markets
such as Poland and the Czech Republic based on strong demand and income
growth, while increasing bond yields and the poor performance of the
Forint are weakening fundamentals in Hungary.

Jos Tromp, Head of CEE Research & Consultancy, CBRE, commented: "Based
on the property transactions under way, 2012 is already following a
similar pattern to 2011. The search for security is set to continue and
lack of product availability at the top-end of the market may start
pushing money into the core markets such as Poland and the Czech
Republic, depending on how the general economic sentiment unfolds.

"Generally, financing will remain the key factor in determining which
way markets move in 2012."

Source: CBRE

Real estate price increase in 2012

What's is happening in the real estate market at the coast of Dalmatia and in Istria? Does the announcement of EU entry in 2013 have an effect already. The first signals are there, and the're very clear.


"The best you can do is to buy a house when prices are at their lowest, and subsequently benefit from the price increase". This mantrum is often heard. But how do you know if the price is at its lowest? And then: are we talking about the price of property in general, or just about specific types of locations? How do you actually know if prices reached the bottom? That's valuable knowledge and international congresses and opinion makers remain undecided when it comes to Europe as a whole. Europe's real estate market is still the toy of the global financial crisis. Instability rules and gets in the mind of the people, who, as a result, don't know where to bank.


Considering that the current crisis hits every market, investors search for unique competitive factors. One positive indicator has the potential to lift one market above the other. Croatia has two: the slow yet stable growth of its economy and the accession to the EU. Both factors, and some characteristics of the Croatian second-home market, form the basis for the prediction that the second home real estate market will show rising prices in the summer of 2012.


Like any other emerging market, Croatia is relatively more dependant on 'direct foreign investment': investments from abroad. Croatia's star had just started rising after the war. The fallout of global investments affects an emerging market more than other economies, hence the slow recovery of Croatia's economomy. Croatia showed, in the first quarter of 2011, still a negative GDP (Gross domestic product). Leading credit advisors now predict that the last quarter of 2011 will show an increase again of 1%.


The date of accession to the EU is set at 2013. Officially. This is an important step and sufficient security for multinationals to expand quickly into the country. Investment funds and banks base most investment decisions on numbers and indicators. 'Being in the EU' raises these indicators and one can already see international banks opening their first offices in Croatia. EU accession will make it easier for any EU citizen to obtain a mortgage with a competitive interest rate (currently there are just a few banks who rule this mortgage market, and their rates are high). In addition, a number of laws lining up with EU law, make it easier to purchase (invest in) apartments or houses even in touristic zones (currently this is only possible in assigned residential zones). This will have a consistently positive effect on the market (more buyers), therefor on prices. But with a delay.


The crisis began to show its full extent in 2009. Due to the sudden absence of UK- and Irish buyers (Europe's largest second home buyers) the market came to a stand still. Dutch, Belgians and Scandinavians were still active, which has to do with another investment mentality. On average, a second home hunter takes one year to find his dream home. There were no houses hunters around anymore in 2009, which resulted in estate agents having virtually nothing to do in 2010. As a result, the prices dropped in that year 2010. Burza Nekretnine and Fillipovic Advisory are two domestic bodies that publish price movement of all real estate. Investors from abroad prefer to look at the core of this second home market, only the type of property that has always moved well: new apartments by the sea and single-family-houses with sea view in Dalmatia or scenic view in Istria. Apartmani-buildings are kept out this equation since the demand for this type of property had already decreased before signals of the crisis. So just the good properties, with nothing wrong about them, started dropping their prices in 2010 with, in average, 25%. Properties with a special characteristic: like newly built seaview houses or properties on the first line to the sea, dropped prices with 10%.


These figures are really significant: Croatia's real estate prices fell back to where they were at the start of the market's boom! This attracts investors of a different kind: people who are really looking to put their money in a stable investment: to save it for their future, for their children's future. These are different kind of people then those who were just hunting for a place in the sun: who just wanted to escape from Northern Europe's bad weather.


The summer of 2011 is over now, and along the entire coast of Croatia the market has shown great movement. Most real estate agents did good business again. Taken into consideration the fact that this market responds to changes in one year, the expectancy that prices will rise in 2012 is considerate. What can we expect to happen?


First of all, in the spring of 2012, it will not be easy to negotiate low prices anymore. Then the special discounted properties will not be present on the market anymore. Then the indicator of average asking prices will move up slowly. One should always consider that the investors in this market are still 90% foreigners, and that the sellers are families, people who owned that plot of land or property for many years, some even built that house by themselves. So unlike Spain, Portugal or Turkey where the market mainly consists of mass resort development, Croatia is a country of small interventions on a community scale. Prices respond to the market, and in Croatia they also respond to the seasons of the year. The summer is Croatia's economic high season!



No one has a crystal ball, so no one can predict what will happen. One can only rely on hard facts and on real figures. Croatia has now, within Europe, a unique position through its accession to the EU. This fact was in recent history the strongest catalist for price increases in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania. There the opportunity that invstors are looking for presents itself. It's nothing grand, nor is it the next golden investment tip; it's just a unique indicator that gives Croatia a competitive edge for investors seeking growth.





This article was written by Middelland Croatia, an Amsterdam and Split based real estate advisory who have been assisting Dutch and Belgium investors with their entry to Croatia's 'second-home' real estate market since 2005. This article was published before, in Dutch language, in Mondi, Benelux's leading second-home magazine.

Source: www.globalpropertyguide.com

Croatia's referendum gave 'yes' to the EU


Reuters

ZAGREB - Croatia voted on Sunday to join the European Union next year, shrugging off concerns over the economic turmoil in the bloc and fears that membership will compromise its hard-won sovereignty.
Provided all 27 member states ratify its accession, the Adriatic state will enter the EU on July 1, 2013, more than two decades after breaking away from socialist Yugoslavia and fighting a 1991-95 war to secure independence.
It will become the second former Yugoslav republic to join the EU, following Slovenia in 2004.
Sixty-six percent ticked "Yes" in the referendum, the state electoral commission said with almost all votes counted.
"This is a historic moment, and could be a turning point in our history," Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic told reporters.
Turnout, however, was low, at 44 percent of eligible voters, well below the resounding votes of many former communist countries that joined in 2004 and 2007.
That figure appeared to reflect widespread uncertainty among Croats over what membership will really mean.
But the result suggested the EU had not completely lost its appeal in the struggling western Balkans despite the debt crisis that is threatening the single currency.
Many Croats hope accession will mark a clear break with the region's recent past of war and nationalism, and help its weak economy through EU funds and full access to the bloc's common market.
The slow pace of reform in the rest of the western Balkans, and waning enthusiasm within the EU for further enlargement, mean other countries in Croatia's neighborhood - such as Serbia, Bosnia and Albania - will wait years before they too can join. Tiny Montenegro on the Adriatic coast is next in line.
"GREAT RELIEF"
"I feel great relief, for me, for my children," said bank worker Jasna Maric, 43. "Only fifteen years ago, we were still killing each other here, so this was a strategic decision."

Foreign Minister Vesna Pusic, though visibly delighted, sounded a note of caution:
"With this, we leave behind political instability, but the rest will depend on our ability and creativity," Pusic said. "Our chances will be better, but no one will do the job for us."

Croatia saw strong growth in the past decade on the back of foreign lending and waves of tourists to its Adriatic coast, but its economy has been hit hard by the global economic crisis.
It will have to work hard to make its public finances sustainable before it is allowed to join the euro zone, which analysts say is unlikely in the next five years.
Its gross domestic product per capita is 61 percent of the EU average.
Analysts and government officials had warned that rejection of EU accession on Sunday would have hit the country's credit rating, deterred investors and further dampened any prospect of a quick economic recovery.

Modern Istrian Villa for sale


A newly built, splendidly designed 3 bed room modern villa with a swimming pool and immense view over the Istrian rolling hills, in the vicinity of Sveti Lovrec.

Located in beatifull part of Istria, in a small hamlet with high quality, up-level villa's in traditional style with a mix of Croatian and foreign owners. A wrought-iron fence opens to the property. The back of the house was designed to be closed, with thick walls, towards the 3-double private parking lot. Once you enter the house it becomes clear that all the openness is positioned towards the garden and the view over the countryside. Spacious living room and dinging area, open kitchen with kitchen island and top quality fittings and fixtures,






 A door leads to a corridor with the private area of the house, that is also designed for spending you holidays: 2x bed room with 2 separate, small bath rooms. 1 extra bed room with private master bath room including bath tub, A covered patio terrace links these rooms. All rooms have double doors opening to the garden. Further, the house has 2x storage space, one is accessible from outside. This layout is ideal when the owner decides to rent out the property and wishes to lock off private possessions,

Asking price: 350.000,00 EUR
Middelland advices 300.000 EUR


INFRASTRUCTURE: separate water connection, separate electrical connection, septic tank, telephone connection, highspeed internet, sat tv, available, video door phone, fenced yard, outdoor lighting, gate with remote opening. Electric underfloor heating in bathrooms, fireplace, air-conditioned with cold- or hot inverter.

town center 1 km, sea 20 km, beach 20 km, shop 1 km, catering facility 1 km, airport 40 km. Nett floor Area: 145,60 m. Plot area: 1.700,00 m












download all information on this villa for sale: www.middellandcroatia.com/devs/modern_istria_villa.pdf