Kathimerini English

Local property prices sink further in Q1

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A downturn in Greece’s property market deepened in the first quarter, as uncertaint­y over its bailout program and chronic weakness in its banking sector further eroded a traditiona­l pillar of the country’s ailing economy. Property accounts for a large chunk of household wealth in Greece, which has one of the highest home-ownership rates in Europe – 80 percent versus a European Union average of 70 percent, according to the European Mortgage Federation. Apartment prices fell by 1.8 percent in the first three months of 2017 from a year earlier, Bank of Greece data showed yesterday, accelerati­ng from a 1 percent drop in the final quarter of last year. That took the cumulative fall since 2008, when the country’s protracted recession began, to 41.8 percent. The market has been hit by property taxes imposed to plug budget deficits, a tight credit market and a jobless rate hovering around 23 percent – the highest in the 19-nation eurozone. Apart from their negative effect on household wealth, falling property prices also affect collateral values on banks’ outstandin­g real estate loans. The slide has gradually eased from 10.8 percent in 2013 to 2.4 percent last year, and economists expect prices to level out soon. “Uncertaint­y related to the completion of a bailout review that prevailed in the first quarter and continued deleveragi­ng by banks weighed on the property market,” National Bank econ-

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