Bulgaria Real Estate Market

The Bulgarian real estate market - trends and perspectives.

Monday, October 31, 2005

Low Interest Rates Popularise Bulgaria’s Mortgages

LOWER interest rates are boosting the popularity of mortgage loans in Bulgaria, a survey by HVB Bank Biochim and Hebros Bank has found.


The “quality survey” was conducted in early October among 300 respondents using direct personal interviews, the banks said on October 20.


More than half of those polled, who had contracted or were planning to contract a mortgage loan from a bank, use or intend to use the money to buy real estate. A relatively large portion (26 per cent) contract a mortgage loan to expand their business, according to the survey.


About 46 per cent of respondents said that interest rates on mortgage loans were still “prohibitively” high, and only 11.2 per cent said that the rates were “acceptable”.


Now that several financial institutions have announced lower interest rates in recent weeks, an increasing number of people can be expected to find that the rates are “acceptable”, which will also boost the number of mortgage-loan borrowers, the report accompanying the survey said.


One in three of those polled said that a decrease in interest rates would result in a substantial increase in the number of people who would seek a bank loan. About half of the respondents expected some, but not a substantial, increase. In general, most of those polled expected lower interest to attract more clients to mortgage lenders.


More than 70 per cent of the respondents were aware that loans in currencies other than US dollars and euro were available abroad at interest appreciably lower than the market rate, and about half would opt for loans in Swiss francs because of the sizably lower monthly payment, the two banks said.


Most banks have recently eased the requirements for mortgage loans and have launched a series of promotions in order to attract customers and increase their market share. However, the competition for customers has also attracted high-risk borrowers, who are already facing difficulties in servicing their loans.

Source: The Sofia Echo

Bulgaria's real estate market ‘maturing’

BULGARIA’S real-estate market has become more mature, with still-rising prices but gradually dropping returns on investment.


This is the main conclusion made by the participants in this autumn’s Real Estate Expo held in Sofia from October 21 to 23. The exhibition, first held a year ago, has turned into the largest such show in the Balkans.

No sharp rise in property prices is expected in the Bulgarian market next year, real estate agents said at the exhibition.

The market is balanced and is gradually evolving into a customer market, especially the market in residential properties and holiday homes. The return on investment in the sector is 12-13 per cent compared to 6.8-10 per cent in Western developed countries. Even if prices go up, the increase will be a small one and due to expected inflation.


There is an imbalance only in the office and industrial estates market where demand exceeds supply. That is why this segment of the market is rather investor-driven. Only there, a more visible price increase is expected in 2006.


Bulgaria and Romania are South-Eastern Europe’s leaders by profitability in office and industrial property. The figures are 9.5 per cent and 10 per cent for Sofia and Bucharest respectively.


Bulgaria and Croatia are the undisputed leaders in the region in the market of holiday homes.


As far as the market of commercial estates is concerned, supply is coming close to demand, real estate agents said.


More than 100 leading developers, real-estate agents and financial institutions took part in Real Estate Expo this autumn 2005. Projects in the design and development phases, worth more than a billion euro, were shown to the visitors.


The largest part of the projects presented at the expo was holiday villages and single properties. Most of them are on the Black Sea coast, but a significant increase in supply has been registered also in winter resorts Bansko and Pamporovo.


The exhibition also outlined the development trends for the residential properties market in Sofia, the capital. Builders, investors and real-estate agencies have been signalling in the past year that due to the lack of free terrain in the centre of the city, construction work has moved to the suburbs, an example being the expensive ones on the slopes of Vitosha Mountain.


However, the underdeveloped infrastructure and communications there are gradually turning into a serious problem for projects’ completion.


Another important conclusion was that Bulgaria’s residential property market had not yet become attractive enough for largest foreign investors. Brokers pointed to countries like Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic, where big Israeli investors, for example, were building residential complexes with 100 or more apartments, with the aim of managing and renting them out.


National Statistical Institute (NSI) data published on October 21 showed that Bulgarian housing prices in the third quarter of 2005 rose by 2.9 per cent compared to the previous quarter of 2005.


The average housing price rose to 751.50 leva a sq m between July and September, up from 730.50 leva in the previous three-month period.


The prices are expected to keep rising at the existing pace in the forth quarter, and the year to end with prices 5-7 per cent higher compared to end-September. The growth will be driven by price rise of the construction materials, the higher fuel prices and the increased wages in the sector.


In August alone, prices of non-metals and construction materials rose by 24.8 per cent year-on-year, while oil product prices in the country rose by 14.85 per cent between May and August, the latest NSI data showed.


In the third quarter, housing prices were the highest in Sofia at 1256.80 leva a sq m, a rise of 5.8 per cent compared to end-June.
The Black Sea city of Varna was second, at 1192 leva a sq m, down by 4.5 per cent. It was followed by the second largest coastal city, Bourgas, at 1142.20 leva a sq m, representing a 2.6 per cent growth.

Source: The Sofia Echo

Friday, October 28, 2005

A Second Home in Bulgaria?

IT wasn't because the Hamptons were too flashy or the Catskills too sleepy that Aaron Hicklin ended up in Croatia. Nor was it simply the cachet of owning a vacation home in Europe.

"I didn't want to go somewhere obvious," said Mr. Hicklin, 36, the editor in chief of Black Book magazine, who lives in Brooklyn. So instead of a seaside cottage in the south of France, he and his partner, Ilya Marritz, 28, a radio producer, bought a 19th-century stone house last year on the lavender-scented island of Hvar off Dalmatia.

"It's the new European Riviera," Mr. Hicklin said. "There's even a celebrity element here, though that's not why we went. Croatia is still relatively undeveloped. And it's relatively dirt cheap."

Forget the Tuscan villa, the chateau in Provence and the pied-à-terre in Paris. They're so cliché, not to mention overpriced. Savvy second-home hunters are packing their passports, pouring through foreign classified ads and snapping up homes in far-flung countries from Argentina and Bulgaria to Nicaragua and Turkey.

Even though these places may lack the glamour of Cannes and are sometimes harder to get to than Timbuktu, they are picturesque, not overrun by Americans and, in some cases, even fashionable. Best of all, there are still bargains to be found.

Mr. Hicklin, for example, paid $65,000 for his two-bedroom cottage in Croatia. In Nicaragua, a new beachfront house goes for as little as $170,000. And in downtown Buenos Aires, $85,000 buys a one-bedroom duplex in Recoleta, one of the city's smarter districts. Try finding a broom closet for that price in Miami Beach or, for that matter, the Fourth Arrondissement of Paris.

"There's nothing available at that price," said David Michonski, the chief executive of Coldwell Banker Hunt Kennedy, a real estate firm in New York, and a specialist in international real estate. "Americans, for the first time in history, are looking abroad for second homes. It's not just Tuscany or England, where the rich have always gone."

The trend is just starting to emerge, as low interest rates and rising property values at home, cheaper air travel and the globalization of the housing market have prompted Americans to canvass the planet for vacation homes beyond the tourist beltway. In addition, baby boomers are better-traveled than their parents and think nothing of sinking money into foreign soil, especially as the domestic market seems to be overheating.

"Real estate has enjoyed a boom for the past five years, and it's spilled over internationally," said Jeff Hornberger, the manager of international business development for the National Association of Realtors in Washington. "Someone who bought a house for $300,000, that's now worth $600,000, may want to downsize and get a second home. But when they see the prices in Florida, they start looking overseas."

That is basically how Marie Munday, 50, a deputy sheriff from Aspen, Colo., ended up as an international snowbird. As her house tripled in value over the last decade, she began condo shopping in Florida, but the prices were still beyond her reach. So she got off the beaten path and landed in Panama.

For $54,000, she and her husband, Chip Munday, 49, a property manager, bought a half acre last month in Altos del María, a new second-home community in the mountains of Panama, about 90 minutes from Panama City. "We hope to do a high-end home with a vanishing-edge pool," Ms. Munday said. "Labor here is pretty cheap. High-end construction is about $65 a foot. In Aspen, the norm is $400."

"The first wave was Costa Rica, Mexico and Thailand, but those countries got expensive; now there's a second wave," said Matthew Atlee, the editor of Escape From America Magazine. The magazine is published online by EscapeArtist.com, a Web site based in Panama about living abroad, which started in 1996 and gets about 8.5 million visits a month. In Central America, the spillover has prompted real estate agents to call Panama, Honduras and Nicaragua, the "next Costa Ricas." In Europe, there is already talk of Croatia's being overpriced, asBulgaria and Romania are promoted as the undiscovered hot spots. And in Asia, Americans are no longer ghettoized in well-traveled places like Bali and the beach resorts of Thailand but are branching out into Malaysia, the Philippines and the mountainous reaches of Thailand around Chiang Mai.

Even the Middle East is up for grabs. "Dubai is a nice blend of the Middle East and America," said Adil Samad, 24, a graduate student from Buffalo whose family recently bought a $600,000 three-bedroom condominium in the planned Trident Grand Residence, an apartment tower overlooking the Persian Gulf. "We considered Miami, India and California. But Dubai is extremely safe and 30 percent cheaper."

WITH the notable exception of Africa, hot zones like Iraq and Afghanistan and restricted spots like Cuba, few corners of the world seem to be off limits to intrepid home buyers anymore.

"What's a verboten place?" asked Mr. Michonski of Coldwell Banker. "I can't think of one. We're seeing this happening around the world. London plumbers are buying places in Portugal. Europeans are buying in Florida. Greece is on the verge of a huge boom. It's identical to global trade. In fact, they're tied together."

For one thing, real estate listings are no longer a local commodity. Not long ago, a tourist might have stumbled upon a "for sale" flier at a local cafe. Today, all one needs to do is plug a country name and the words "real estate" into a computer search engine to see what's available. That even works for places as hard to travel to as Fiji, which is about a 10-hour flight from Los Angeles.

"I had over 100,000 hits and 200 people e-mail me in the first month," said John Knox, 45, a land surveyor from Costa Mesa, Calif., who listed his Fiji bungalow on EscapeArtist.com in June. Last month, a British couple bought the property, a two-bedroom house on the volcanic island of Taveuni, for $55,000. "Now I'm trying to find a place in Croatia, maybe Montenegro."

The process for buying overseas has also become less risky, as the financial and legal institutions that make it possible for people to own second homes are increasingly transparent, global and linked. That is not to say there are no pitfalls. In many countries, there is little legal protection for home buyers should the deal sour. Mortgages for foreigners are nearly impossible to obtain, and the mechanism for transferring titles can be downright Kafkaesque.

"The nightmare scenario is the guy you meet at the bar who sells you a house, but doesn't actually own it," said Lief Simon, the chief financial officer of International Living, a Web site started by Americans in Ireland about buying property overseas. Mr. Simon also runs seminars that promote overseas real estate to investors.

Some countries restrict foreigners from owning land. Mexico, for example, prohibits Americans from buying property within 31 miles of the coast. Similar restrictions are found in Thailand, Croatia and much of Central America.

But as countries recognize the value of the second-home market, ownership rules are being relaxed. Or at least bent. In Mexico, Americans can now buy beachfront property through what is known as a "fidecomiso," a title-holding trust. In Croatia, homeowners form a local corporation. And in Thailand, where foreigners are barred from owning more than 49 percent of a property, buyers have developed a kind of corporate shell game to give themselves control of their properties.

Maintaining a home overseas is also becoming easier. The peace of mind afforded by title insurance, once a rarity in less-developed regions, is becoming standard. Financing for foreigners is available in a growing number of countries, including Panama, Mexico, New Zealand and, soon, Croatia. And a cottage industry of rental and caretaker agencies has sprouted to meet a budding demand.

SOME countries are going so far as to court American buyers. In Dubai, the local emirates designated broad strips of land as freehold, or private property, in 2002 to lure developers. Malaysia recently started a program that allows foreigners who buy property to apply for renewable five-year visas.

"The borders for second homes are falling," said AJ Janoyan, 35, a lawyer from Emeryville, Calif., who has second homes in Lebanon, Argentina and, as of last year, Armenia. He is now in the market for something in Croatia andBulgaria. "There are lots of opportunities before these places convert to the euro. I think it's all open season."

Like many foreign homeowners, Mr. Janoyan treats his vacation properties as an investment. He visits only a few times a year. To help pay for the scattered homes, he has a business partner and rents out the properties to vacationers through local agents. "It's all about discovering new places and having a great time while we make money," he said. "The X-factor is no longer the distance, but how reputable the local people are."

Some economists, however, worry that the global buying frenzy is exporting the American real estate boom to other countries. Robert J. Shiller, a professor of economics at Yale, cautions that vacation home destinations tend to be driven by fashion and, therefore, are more vulnerable to bubbles. He calls them "glamour properties."

But Suzanne Halmer is not the least bit concerned. A teacher's assistant in Los Angeles, Ms. Halmer postponed her dreams of a Paris apartment and, instead, paid 22,000 euros (about $27,000) this year for a 400-square-foot studio inBulgaria . It is part of a new resort called Sunny Beach, near the old town of Nesebur, that looks like a mini-Florida development on the Black Sea.

"Five years from now, it's going to be worth 85,000 euros," said Ms. Halmer, 47, who also owns a ski condo in Park City, Utah. "I'm not crazy about Bulgaria, but I'm crazy about the prices."

Source: New York Times
Author: Denny Lee


New Real Estate Taxes to Double Sales in Bulgaria

The sale of real estate in Bulgaria is expected to double after the government approves the new property tax evaluation. The increase in taxes is expected to be between 20 and 100 per cent. Pleven administrators said that the announcement of tax increases led to large increase in the number of sold property, as well as to higher demand. The number of transactions is expected to double by the end of the year. For the first nine months of the year, a total of 3400 apartments have been sold. Experts predict that by the end of 2005 the number of sales will surpass the one for 2004. During the past year, a total of 4446 apartments were sold.

Experts also said that the number of property donations has also increased. For the first nine months of 2005 640 donations were made. The number for 2004 is 640. The reason for such developments is also the expected tax increase and people prefer to pass their property to relatives or people they know well.

The legal mortgages for the same period are 294. experts also registered an increase in the number of renting contracts. By September, the number of signed rent contracts totalled 1635, Dnevnik newspaper reported.

Source: The Sofia Echo

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Record-High New Homes on Sale in Sofia

A record-high 2 million square meters of newly built floorage will be on sale in the capital Sofia alone by the end of 2006, the National Real Property Association announced.

About 500,000 square meters will be supplied by the end of this year, exceeding twice the demand, the association head Orlin Vladikov said, as cited by local 24 Hours Daily.

The daily comments that the floorage of an average flat amounts to 90 square meters, which makes a total of 22,000 new flats out for sale by the end of next year.

Sofia real estate market scored its previous record in 1985 when 16,500 newly built were out for sale.

The National Real Property Association incorporates members from 27 populated centres throughout Bulgaria.

Source: Sofia News Agency

Monday, October 24, 2005

FT: Investors urged to beware of Sipps property hype

Investors hoping to make quick riches from new rules that will allow them to put residential property in their personal pensions are being urged to take a reality check and be wary of getting caught in property stings.

These cautionary words come as pensions providers report worrying approaches from some in the property industry keen to ride the wave of interest in the new regime which risks creating a property bonanza here and overseas.

From April next year, under the new regime referred to as “A-Day”, the range of permitted investments in a self-invested personal pension (Sipp) will expand to include a number of new asset classes such as wine or antiques. But what is really attracting investor interest is residential property. The new freedoms could attract hordes of buy-to-let investors to pensions, enabling them to receive income tax relief of up to 40 per cent on buy-to-let investments sheltered in their pensions.

With less than six months before A-Day, there has been an explosion in the number of websites marketing property investment opportunities and Sipps, particularly in countries popular with British investors, such as Spain and Florida. Now Sipp providers say they are being inundated with unsolicited approaches from many property companies and investors keen to get on the Sipps bandwagon.

“We have had some e-mails from companies with odd sounding names saying they are specialists in a certain area and wanting to offer our clients the benefits of their property services in Bulgaria or wherever,”
says David Baker, director of James Hay, the UK’s largest Sipp provider.

Read the rest of the article on www.ft.com

Source: Finantial Times Europe

Black Sea Property Fund to build apartments in ski resort Pamporovo

The Black Sea Property Fund, managed by Jersey-based Development Capital Management Limited, said it will invest 6.9 mln euro in the construction of 300 upmarket holiday apartments in Bulgarian ski resort Pamporovo, in the Rhodope mountains, to take advantage of the opportunities for year-round tourism in the area.

The complex, which will also incorporate retail, spa and restaurant facilities, should be completed by the start of the 2007/2008 winter season.

The Black Sea Property Fund was listed on the London Stock Exchange's AIM in March 2005. Some 40% of the proceeds from the flotation have been invested in 5 projects in Bulgaria, including schemes for a combined 2,800 apartments.

In related news, Dow Jones Newswires reported that Irish financial group Hibernian has just launched a European Residential Property Fund which will concentrate initially on the Eastern European countries which are new members of the EU or are waiting to join.

The European Residential Property Fund says it is the first to offer investors an indirect route into residential property investment: most funds offering access to property investment concentrate on commercial property only. The Hibernian fund will invest initially in city center apartment blocks in Warsaw and Prague and in holiday accommodation in Croatia and Bulgaria.
Lewis Charles Sofia Property Fund and Bulgarian Property Developments and are the other 2 AIM-listed funds created for investment in Bulgaria's property market.

Source: Dnevnik

Friday, October 21, 2005

Real Estate Expo Kicks off in Sofia

More than 300 investment projects at the cost of over BGN 1 B can be seen at the opening of the Real Estate Expo in Sofia.

The third edition of the major event, which is held twice a year, running as Imoti Expo kicked off Friday to continue four days in the International Expo Centre.

Participants include companies from various real estate sectors such as construction, agencies, banks and financial institutions.

The construction and real estate are among the speediest developing sectors in the country, with a growth of 15-20% on an annual basis.

The forum gathers at a unique venue not only leading real estate agencies, but also banking institutions and municipal associations working in the field of local administration reforms.

The successful debut of “IMOTI EXPO” was in 2004 as the first large scale realty trade exhibition in Bulgaria following the dynamics of the real estate market and the increased consumers’ demand. The exposition is the equivalent of the world popular Real Estate Expos and offers a perfect platform for promoting the latest products and services in the real estate industry: sales or rentаls of houses and summer villas, apartments and apartment complexes, hotels and hotel complexes, offices and commercial spaces, private properties; financial, insurance, planning and design services; real estate management, brokerage and business development.

“IMOTI EXPO” offers unique opportunity for business contacts and marketing, which benefits each participant. It provides space for direct negotiations between seller and buyer and saves much time and energy in choosing the best offer on the real estate market.

The Second trade show (May 2005) gathered over 250 investment projects summing up to the total amount of one billion euro. Over 100 leading construction and investment companies, real estate agencies and financial institutions presented their products and services at the exposition space of 4000 sq.m.

The current fall edition of “IMOTI EXPO” (October 2005) marks an increased interest on the part of the exhibitors, as well as reflects the steady growth tendency in the Bulgarian real estate market’s supply and demand. The leading new construction market segment in the recent years is the share the residential spaces. Substantial growth shows the “second home” holiday properties market, together with the hotels and hotel complex investments, and last but not least - the market of the industrial and commercial spaces. All recent market trends are reflected in the current real estate trade show.

Over 300 projects for over 1 bln. euro will be presented at the forum. The temp of increase of the of the participants is a natural and direct indicator of the sector development. Over 100 projects were presented at the beginning of the event, at the overall amount of 500 mln. euro. The forum is in reply to the construction works boom in the country. According to the statistics the temp of increase is an average of 15-18 % annually - a natural result of the process dynamics in the construction sector and of the overall economic rise, the credit expansion and the investment activity.

Among the largest exhibitors at the trade show are: the based in Varna - Planex Holding Ltd., BTC AD, Adis Ltd, Address, Colliers, Home for You, I Build, Fairplay International, Biochim, Residential park, Yavlena, Shans 96, Linexa, Dreamville ltd., Fenix, Glaxa Properties, Balkanstroy, Teambuild, Asspekti Plus, etc.

The banking and financial institutions cover over 10 % of the exhibition area. A wide variety of financing opportunities and mortgage loans are offered traditionally by OBB, Biochim, First investment bank, DSK bank, Post Bank, etc.

A press conference of IMOTI EXPO and the National Association of the Real Estate will take place on the 23rd October 2005 at 10 am, where the most recent trends in the real estate market will be announced.
On the last day of the trade show at an official ceremony a lottery winner will be drawn among the visitors of the trade expo, who will receive a holiday apartment at the Bulgarian black sea coast, provided by Planex Holding.

The best guarantee for the success and high standard of the real estate expo is the consecutive participation of leading companies from the previous two events in 2004 and 2005 as well as the support of FIABCI Bulgaria as a patron.
The trade show has a number of media partners such as the newspapers Capital, Dnevnik, Construction & City, the magazines Real Estate Index and ADIS.

Source: Sofia News Agency, BulgarReklama

Thursday, October 20, 2005

ADIS Real Estate Topped 20% Yield

ADIS Ltd. reported sustainable growth in the third-quarter (Q3) of 2005 results.

For the January-September period the yield is at 20 percent, its net profit margin amounted to over 16%. The company has increased its earnings by 9% in comparison with the same period of 2004. Its immediate liquidity is at 1,6.

“I believe the trend will continue during the fourth quarter of the year, regardless of the inflation rate and the hikes in the prices for electricity, heating utilities and hot water,” said Deyan Kavrakov, CEO of ADIS Ltd.
The average occupancy rate of ADIS property portfolio, towers to 89%, the company announced.

The rate is expected to exceed 91% by the end of this year.

Saturday, October 15, 2005

Property Tax in Bulgaria Would Rise by 30 per cent

Property tax in Bulgaria’s largest cities, such as Sofia, Varna, Bourgas and Plovdiv, would rise by 30 per cent, Deputy Finance Minister Georgi Kadiev said on October 14. According to the plan, the increase in mid-size towns will come to 25 per cent, while the rate in small towns will be increased by 20 per cent. The tax hike will result from updating the tax evaluation of real estate. The move will push the sum needed for transfer of immovable property, which is calculated as a two per cent charge on the property’s tax evaluation. The last update of the evaluations in this country was carried out in 1998.

Source: The Sofia Echo

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Interest in Bulgarian Real Estate Continues

SEPTEMBER saw many signs of a continuing increase in interest in real estate in Bulgaria.

On September 20, it was announced that Formula One team owner Eddie Jordan planned to invest in the construction of residential estates, a yacht port or a golf course near Bourgas. Jordan was in Bulgaria to meet Bourgas mayor Yoan Kostadinov.

During the talks, Jordan said he had already started investing in the construction of a residential estate in Obzor. The facility will have 630 apartments and will be ready in the next two years.

Kostadinov requested a written presentation of the intentions of Jordan’s investment company, saying that the municipality could make available land to construct a golf course, residential buildings and two yacht berths. But it could also use this interest to promote Bulgaria as a tourist and property destination.

Meanwhile, a large number of hotels at the Black Sea coast have been offered for sale at the end of the summer season. Observers of the market say that the owners of these hotels have found that the investment they have made might not prove worthwhile.

The number of offered sites varies between 180 and 200. Owners of 70 hotels are each asking more than one million euro. The rest are smaller, family-type hotels with no more than 50 beds, with starting prices of about 330 000 euro.

For larger hotels that are in operation, prices start from three million euro and go up to 25 million. The price is determined by factors such as location, number of rooms, additional services and surrounding land.

An additional 170 guest houses are being sold in the Bourgas region. About 40 are on sale in Varna. The average price is 768 euro a sq m. Property on the southern coast tends to be more expensive because of the larger beaches and longer season.

“I predicted this phenomenon long ago. Over the past two or three years, the development of tourism in Bulgaria has outpaced overall economic growth in the country, and especially the development of infrastructure,” said Blagoi Ragin, head of the Bulgarian Association of Hoteliers and Restaurateurs.

Ragin said that hotels had been put up for sale because the owners could not recover the costs of their investment. As a result, the real estate market was saturated.

As regards infrastructure, there has been no improvement for 15 tears. A tourism industry cannot exist without a working network of highways and a working economy, Ragin said.

Brokers say that there are a number of hotels in Sofia that have been or will soon be offered on the real estate market. Fifty new buildings are under construction in Sofia at present. It is unlikely that there will be buyers for all of them. And the problem is again rooted in the poor quality of infrastructure.

However, there is a positive sentiment on another segment of the real-estate market, according to some analysts. Sofia will have nine per cent more office space for rent at the end of this year, compared to six months before, but rents will still be rising, Colliers International said in their newest report, published on September 17.

High-quality office space for rent in Sofia will increase by more than 20 000 sq m by the end of 2005 from 228 000 sq m at the end of June, Colliers says. This increase will add to the 3.64 per cent increase between January and June, when new office buildings in the capital’s suburbs started operations.

Despite the higher offer, rents will keep rising in the second half of 2005, Colliers believes.

The average monthly rents for different types of office space were 10 to 13.5 euro a sq m in the first half of 2005, with leases for some downtown offices reaching as high as 18 euro. Rents averaged 12 euro for a sq m at the end of 2004.

Most of the office space that appears on the market in the second half is also in the suburbs of Sofia.

The largest supply of office space would push the vacancy rate up in the second half of 2005 despite increasing demand. Vacancy rates rose by 1.5 percentage points to 13.6 per cent in the first half of 2005.

The influx of foreign investors in Bulgaria and the expansion of those who already have businesses in the country have lifted demand for high quality office space.

Author: Ivan Vatahov
Source: www.sofiaecho.com