Real estate investments abroad
Recently, the investment property sector is being targeted more in countries like Romania, Bulgaria, etc., rather this is directed abroad.
"The Romanian real estate market has the same performance that Spain had 10-15 years ago when any property acquired produced the effect high profitability"
The entry in May 2004, eight countries of eastern Europe into the European Union - to which were added Bulgaria and Romania in January 2007 - has become his once paralyzed effervescent real estate market. The ability to trade freely with other EU countries, coupled with the receipt of cohesion funds, ensures the revaluation of property investments in the short term.
For example, Poland is the country that is getting harder Spanish capital, and already have installed on their territory nearly all companies that have made possible the "revolution of the brick home." The revaluation average floors in the past five years reached 20 percent and in the last year some cities such as Krakow and Wroclaw recorded a dramatic 76 percent appreciation of their homes. A "safe bet almost 'as they say in the industry.
Another business model in this is what Romania, a state in which more than half a million of its citizens living in Spain. The business here is to advise those immigrants established in our country who choose to buy a home in his homeland. Prices are very attractive: just over 70,000 euros costs a chalet in the charming city of Sibiu, or 50,000 euros (less than 10 million pesetas) for an apartment fifty square metres in the north. The best of Romania, according to explain the real estate Spanish installed there "is that it has not been built in twenty years and there is a shortage of housing.
Images of Romania
Images of Romania