According to Knight Frank, the European debt crisis is affecting the global home price index, which has seen its worst performance since 2009.
According to Knight Frank's newest Global House Price Index, global home prices grew by only 0.9 percent in the year to March 2012, the lowest yearly performance since the depths of the recession in 2009. Doubts about the Eurozone's long-term viability, combined with Asian governments' determined efforts to cool their markets and discourage speculative investment, have taken their toll. Although global house prices remained unchanged in the first three months of 2012, it is the first time that yearly price growth has fallen below 1% since Q4 2009. Cvs pharmacy
Highlights from the Global Home Price Index
include:
The Knights of St. Frank In the year to
March 2012, the Global House Price Index increased by 0.9 percent.
In the first quarter of 2012, prices were
unchanged.
Brazil had the highest yearly growth rate
of 23.5 percent.
Ireland had the slowest growth rate, at
-16.3 percent.
Africa has the fastest-falling house prices
(-0.8 percent )
Growth in Asia Pacific has fallen to 2.1
percent.
House prices declined in 58 percent of
nations in the Knight Index during the first quarter of 2012. House Price Index
for the World
The Eurozone's malaise, the IMF's decision
to lower its GDP predictions, and concerns that the global economic recovery is
struggling to get traction are all contributing to the decline in mood.
According to the IMF, global GDP would expand by 3.3 percent in 2012 (up from 4
percent in 2011), whereas GDP in the Eurozone would shrink by 0.5 percent
(previously 1.1 percent growth).
The uncertainty surrounding Europe's
sovereign debt crisis and Greece's political gridlock is influencing global
trade decisions and consumer confidence.
There are few signals that European
homeowners can be optimistic. Unemployment is rising as a result of government
budget cuts, depleting salaries and disposable incomes, lowering housing
demand. In the year leading up to March 2012, the average price of a home in
Europe stayed unchanged. Estonia had the fastest growth rate of 13.9 percent,
while Ireland had the slowest growth rate of -16.3 percent.
In terms of housing costs, the Asian tiger
today resembles a domestic cat, thanks to government measures to curb price
inflation. In Q1 2010, the region's average annual price growth exceeded 16
percent, but two years later, it's closer to 2 percent. The region's growth
continues to outpace the worldwide average, although the margins have narrowed
significantly.
Knight Frank's Director of Research in
Asia, Nicholas Holt, tells World Property Channel, "The Chinese housing
market has had a difficult year, with bank financing being tightened for both
developers and buyers as a result of the ongoing cooling measures. Lending
limitations, additional taxes, a ban on multiple home purchases, and new laws
aimed at limiting the inflow of hot foreign cash have all had the desired
impact "For global housing markets, the next three to six months will be
crucial. The crisis could be alleviated if unrest in Spain and Greece can be
placated, and France and Germany can agree on a firm path of growth-promoting
measures. In any case, the index will not begin to strengthen until 2013 and
possibly the second half of that year.
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