Hi Marcus P
I've asked Stan to confirm that in your example above you'd take home 65%.
However, we are finding that more and more staff in Romania want to be paid in Euros.
Why?
Well, this makes sense if your costs are based in Euros - ie your mortgage (hey - who is going to pay 9%+ interest rate when you can pay 4%+???)
Therefore, the long term currency basis will be the currency in which people get paid AND use to pay their mortgages - therefore Euros.
I think this explains why Romanian professionals want to be paid in Euros - they've worked it out!
Luckily, by buying new build - your apartment will sell into this Euro minded part of the local market - and not the panelaks which are more likely to be priced in Ron.
We are seeing - as Charles says - that everyone wants to work in Euros and given the experience of seeing this pattern repeated in other countries (Poland and Bulgaria / Slovakia - where the local currency is in a fixed peg to the Euro for example) I think this is highly likely to continue.
The answer, therefore - is that you are right that you can not easily predict currencies - but the only real currency questions is - will the GBP strengthen against the Euro?
My long term answer is that I think any change will be minor compared to your gain.
Short term - yes, you willl have fluctuations - but only if you transmit the money back to GBP.
If, on the other hand - you can say that you will either
a) keep the property long term or
b) sell the proeprty and re-invest in another 'euro influenced currency' then you have removed all the risk. So, you choose your timing to bring the money back to GBP to take advantage of the best exchange rates. Or just use it to buy the retirement home in Spain - and pay for your winter lifestyle!
What I am saying is this - that you need never bring back the Euros to GBP - therefore it is quite possible that you can completely remove any exchange rate risk.
So, if you believe that the central and Eastern Europe property markets have great potential - then you have practically zero currency risk (unless you are forced to sell and repatriate to GBP to meet UK debts / desperate circumstances etc...).
If you don't believe the performance of cental and Eastern Europe over the past 3 years - or you believe that it will not continue - then I'd suggest you don't invest in the first place.
So - this is really a question of confidence - do you or don't you believe that this is the best property investment region?
This is not - if I may say so - really a currency question - it is in truth a question of whether you have confidence in this region.
I think if you do your research and answer this question for your self, then all the other issues will quickly fall away.
Hope this helps clarify things a bit?
Cheers
Neil
Forum Home » Devaluation of Romanian Currency
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Do you believe in the Property Investment Potentail of central and Eastern Europe??? | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 12 08 11:39 Total Posts: 153 Users Rating: |
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| Stanislaw Staromlynski (Lite Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 12 08 13:38 Total Posts: 16 Users Rating: |
If your sales contract includes a statement: 'the price is an equivalent of 100,000 EURO payable in Lei at the rate of exchange of the date of transaction' then the weakening or strengthening of the local currency does not have much impact on your profits as the amount of the EUROs you get is always the same. So, if there is 50% growth in prices based on Euro, you are right saying that you profit in Lei is 65% as you can buy more Lei for the same amount of EURO. But it does not mean that your overall profits are higher than 50% as you also need to spend more Lei to buy the same amount of Euro. I would call your 15% profit a local profit. You could probably buy 15% longer spaghetti but at a local shop in Bucharest only. Please not that the above mentioned statement protects you also when the rate of exchange goes in the other direction i.e. if the rate is 3.0 Lei /1 EURO. You still get the same amount of EURO.
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| Marcus P (PRO Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 12 08 14:26 Total Posts: 13 Users Rating: |
Thanks everyone for addressing the questions. The answers have been helpful and I'm sure put a few peoples minds at rest. For those of us who do not deal with these issues on a daily basis, figuring out how the dynamics of these situations work, is not always straight forward!
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RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 12 08 16:38 Total Posts: 153 Users Rating: |
Hey Marcus P
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| pag (PRO Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 12 08 16:41 Total Posts: 7 Users Rating: |
Neil,
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RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 13 08 10:30 Total Posts: 153 Users Rating: |
Hi Pag So what you are saying is that the local romanian resale market can be conducted in euros? I am not very familiar with this market but in my experience other CEE markets e.g. czech/slovak/hungarian etc. prefer to deal in their local currency for rents/resales/mortgages etc. (even though slovakia is likely to join euro next year). Yes. The Slovak Crown is already on a fixed peg to the Euro - therefore there is no movement between SKKs and the Euro - therefore, for our purposes the value is the value in Euros - fixed - done - no change. Hungary - I'm not going there - I'm not recommending investment there because of the high taxes, low growth, squeeze on spending and risk to currency. Clearly - this market is not linked to the Euro in my view. Czech - there is strong evidence that the Czech currency tracks the Euro. I believe most resales are in Czech Crowns - but I believe the variation between the two countries is small - and will get smaller as Poland moves closer and Slovakia become Euro denominated. A lot of these currencies either have pegs / fixed or floating / or under the influence of the Euro to such an extent that the currency differences are ceasing to matter. The only country where it does matter is Romania - because there has been movement between the Ron and Euros - but that is a country where salaries and big purchases are being made in Euros - and therefore, with new build - we are pretty much outside the risk of currency fluctuations. That's my view anyway. Hope this helps. Cheers Neil
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| Easy Credit (Lite Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 14 08 08:16 Total Posts: 44 Users Rating: |
also re-sales of property mostly (+95%) take place in EURO. So there's no need for a conversion in the local currency (being the RON) , and effectively there's no loss on the currency ...
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| alrichards (PRO Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 14 08 09:09 Total Posts: 39 Users Rating: |
My understanding is that in Romania all real estate transactions between Romanian companies must take place in RON even if the companies concerned have Euro accounts.
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| Easy Credit (Lite Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 14 08 09:19 Total Posts: 44 Users Rating: |
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| Charles Bell (PRO Member) | RE: Devaluation of Romanian Currency - interest rates go up - hurray!?! | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Feb 14 08 15:52 Total Posts: 84 Users Rating: |
Dear Neil
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