Ryan Air are paying particular attention to Budapest at the moment, with several new routes opening up to the UK and also to various other locations throughout EU, most recently announced, - Germany. Investment in the tourism industry and the continual whitening of the economy (19% increase in collected taxes!), reduction in public spending all shine a positive light on the EMU convergence program. Office market is booming! As is the residential market. The development I purchased in - the first phase sold out now - within 5 month. Prices are now 19% higher than when I purchased at launch ... how that will translate into real gain we will have to see. Next few years will see ALOT of apartments built, however I think that this increased supply will be outstripped by increased demand. As more and more international companies take up office space, relocating staff to HU, new residential flats seem to be of particular interest now. Todays headlines "Hungarian households' Swiss franc-denominated loans rise to all-time high in June". Big purchases continue through foreign currency - beating the painful austerity measures. Not everything is rosey though ... retail sector is having a tough year - not likely to improve significantly for next year. This is of course entirely due to the austerity measures taken by the government. From now, until EMU entry I see gradual improvements in all facets of the HU economy, whilst the reverse is true here in the UK. I see nothing but pain in the UK as interest rates continue to rise and the subprime situation deteriorates, and as businesses find it increasingly difficult to raise finance, increasing unemployment and general unwinding of UK debt burden are the order of the day. Very good time to be in the debt consolidation market in UK, - for the next few years at least.
Forum Home » Hungary for growth - Picking Gyor and Pecs?
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| Richard (PRO Member) | Hungary for growth - Picking Gyor and Pecs? | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Aug 4 07 22:26 Total Posts: 82 Users Rating: |
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| Huw (PRO Member) | Hungary | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Aug 6 07 00:03 Total Posts: 227 Users Rating: |
Richard couldn't disagree but surely there are many better places to invest currently? Huw
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| Richard (PRO Member) | Better places | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Aug 11 07 17:28 Total Posts: 82 Users Rating: |
Perhaps there are more popular places to invest (I would not say better places), however I am not a sheep and do not like following the herd. When the marketing machines of companies such as property secrets finally refocus on Hungary I will reap the benefits. I bought my 2 bed apartment for 80k Euros 5 months ago, when investor confidence was rock bottom (it has since bounced back after several years of falls). It is now worth 96k Euro (end of first phase of the development). It will not be completed until December 2008 - (20 month development), by then I expect the economy to be well into a growth phase.
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| Paul H (PRO Member) | Budapest | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Aug 13 07 16:11 Total Posts: 18 Users Rating: |
Some real figures about my experience so far in Budapest; Apartment purchased for 29m huf late 2005. Apartment completed in April of this year and 70% of payment made. Tenant has just moved in for 900 euros a month. Developer is selling identical apartment 2 floors down for 40m huf (appreciate this may not indicate the real gain, but it's as good an analysis as anything else I have seen here). Market for tenants is tough, had to add air-con and Ikea furnishing will not do. The apartment is fitted-out to a high standard and there are £5k of furnishings to include in any calculations. Like Richard I agree that Budapest is not to be discounted.
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| Tom (PRO Member) | Budapest | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Aug 13 07 16:43 Total Posts: 94 Users Rating: |
The problem I found with budapest is that there seems to be two prices there. One for the locals and one for us with a good 20% difference between the two.
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| Richard (PRO Member) | Budapest | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Aug 22 07 21:02 Total Posts: 82 Users Rating: |
There is a two price system and it is very annoying, - however if you have a good agent (like I have) you can get the local price.
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| charlie Henry (PRO Member) | Budapest | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Sep 5 07 21:40 Total Posts: 0 Users Rating: unrated |
Hi Richard, I am currently living in Budapest and looking to purchase a property, can you give me the name of your good agent please?
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| Richard (PRO Member) | Hungary Risk? | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Oct 1 07 10:02 Total Posts: 82 Users Rating: |
Hungary slips in Euromoney country risk ranking, still scores well Monday, October 1, 2007 10:50:00 AM Hungary has slipped back in the latest country risk poll conducted by Euromoney, but remained in the upper quadrant of the list comprising 185 countries. In the rankings for Eastern Europe (22 countries) Hungary came in third behind Slovenia and the Czech Republic. The twice-yearly Euromoney country risk assessment uses analytical indicators, credit indicators and market indicators, in nine categories, namely Political risk (25% weighting), Economic performance (25%), Debt indicators (10%), Debt in default or rescheduled debt (10%), Credit ratings (10%), Access to bank finance (5%), Access to short-term finance (5%), Access to international capital markets (5%) and forfeiting (5%). Hungary ranks 43rd, down from the 41st place in the previous report. Slovenia still tops the ranking in the region, but has also slipped to the 26th position from the 25th. Hungary remained on the third place behind Slovenia and the Czech Republic among EU members in CEE, followed by Poland (44th on the global ranking), Estonia (45th), Slovakia (46th) and Latvia (48th). Lithuania is now ranked 50th on the global list, down from the 49th place six months ago. Luxembourg once again snatched the first place on the global country risk ranking, obtaining 99.59 points of the 100 possible. The runner-ups were Norway, Switzerland and Denmark. The United States came in 7th in September, down from the 4th place in March, over concerns relating to sub-prime mortgages in the US. Euromoney expects sub-prime woes to keep suffocating the US financial and residential housing markets for over a year, and projects major correction on the markets.
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| Huw (PRO Member) | Survey | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Oct 1 07 19:46 Total Posts: 227 Users Rating: |
If USA is so high I would suggest this isn't much of a guide for current investors!
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| Richard (PRO Member) | RE: Survey | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted: Jan 17 08 10:18 Total Posts: 82 Users Rating: |
Moody's director says Hungary embarked on reforms at the right time
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