After struggling through three hard years of housing price falls as a result of the global financial crisis, the Estonian residential property market has stumbled out of the dark and has been continually increasing rapidly since mid-2010. Ober Haus reports that prices in the capital of Tallinn increased 5.9% in 2012 and numbers from Statistics Estonia reveal similar performance in the rest of the country’s major cities. Despite a big comeback from the recession, the country saw slow economic growth in 2012 and the great gains are from severe lows that rivaled some of the worst in the world. For more on this continue reading the following article from Global Property Guide.
The average price of apartments in Tallinn, Estonia’s capital, rose by 5.93% (2.4% in real terms) during the year to end-December 2012, to €1,126 per square meter (sq. m.), according to Ober Haus. During the latest quarter, apartment prices increased 0.72% (0.92% in real terms).
Property prices in the country’s major cities continue to rise during the year to end-Q3 2012, according to Statistics Estonia:
- In Estonia excluding Tallinn, the average purchase price of dwellings rose by 10.25% to €507.9 per sq. m.
- In Tallinn, the average price of dwellings purchased increased by 2.8% to €1,101.3 per sq. m.
- In Tartu City, the second largest city and the intellectual capital of Estonia, the average price of dwellings purchased soared by 14.6% to €958.2 per sq. m.
- In Parnu City, the country’s summer capital, located in the southwestern, the average price of dwellings purchased rose by 3.8% to €791.8 per sq. m.
- In Estonia, the average purchase price of dwellings rose by 6.4% to €770.5 per sq. m.
After amazing 36% annual house price rises from 2004 to 2006, prices of dwellings started to fall in 2007, partly due to the global financial meltdown.
- In 2007, the average price of dwellings dropped by 2.4% (-10.9% inflation-adjusted)
- In 2008, house prices fell 21.8% (-26.9% inflation-adjusted)
- In 2009, house prices dropped 30.2% (-29% inflation-adjusted)
After these 3 horrendous years, a house price recovery began in the second half of 2010, and during 2010 the average price of dwellings was up 8.3% (2.4% inflation-adjusted). In 2011, house prices soared by 15.8% (11.6%).
The total number of dwelling permits rose by 7.2% to 3,035 units in 2012, according to the Register of Construction Works. The total number of dwellings completed increased by about 3.8% to 1,190 units. By end-2012, the total housing stock in Estonia was 657,800 dwellings.
The average interest rate of housing loans fell to 2.57% in December 2012 from 3.42% in January 2012, based on figures from the central bank. Despite these low interest rates, the total housing loans in Estonia fell slightly by 0.1% to €5.85 billion by end-Q4 2012 from the previous quarter, according to Bank of Estonia.
Estonia’s housing market is expected to remain stable in 2013, with property prices rising modestly, amidst modest economic growth, according to local property experts. In 2013, the economy is expected to grow by 3%, after GDP growth of 2.4% in 2012 and 7.6% in 2011.
The great boom of 2000-2007Estonia’s housing market was in continuous boom from 2000 to 2007. Why?
- low interest rates
- low inflation
- strong economic growth
- rapid wage increases
- huge foreign demand for property, especially from other Europeans
Demand for properties in Tallinn reached an all time high in 2006, with foreigners attracted by the city’s potential. Tallinn accounted for more than half of all real estate transactions in Estonia.
House prices in Estonia rose by double-digit levels from 2000 to 2007. In Tallinn, the average price of 2 room flats rose by an average of 27% annually from 2001 to 2005. House price growth accelerated in 2006, with prices rising by more than 50% y-o-y.
The average price of 2-room flats in Tallinn rose by 448.7% from 2000 to 2007, in Tartu prices rose 431.5% and in Parnu 440%. Prices of three-room flats were equally impressive, rising 412% in Tallinn, 481% in Tartu, and 471.5% in Parnu.
Meanwhile owner-occupancy rates rose strongly, up from 85% in 2002, to 96% in 2004. The rental market shrank from 12% of households (with 9% privately renting and 3% in social rents) in 2002, to just 4% in 2004.
The house price falls in Estonia in 2008 were among the biggest in the world, rivaled only by Latvia. These falls were in sharp contrast to enormous annual price increases in the past, peaking at an annual price increase of 77.5% during the year to end-Q1 2006.
The fastest mortgage market expansion in history?The house price boom was supported by a massive expansion of the mortgage market, growing by an average of 62% yearly from 2002 to 2006.
Outstanding housing loans grew from 4.7% of GDP in 2000, to 37% in 2007 (from EEK4.5 billion (€286 million) in 2000 to EEK88 (€5.6) billion in 2007 and EEK 97 (€6.2) billion in 2008).
The mortgage market boom was pushed by:
- the favorable macroeconomic environment
- financial market reforms
- the entry of foreign banks and lower interest rates
At the peak of the boom, banks were willing to provide loans with a maximum lending period of 30 years, and a loan-to-value ratio of 100%.
Interest rate conundrumOne of the factors that contributed to mortgage and house price boom was the pegging of the Estonian kroon to the deutschemark in 1992 and eventually to the euro in 2001. In June 2004, Estonia entered ERM 2 in preparation for the eventual adoption of the euro. Although the kroon is allowed to fluctuate within a 15% band, Estonia preferred a peg of EEK 15.6466 per euro. This led to lower inflation and lower interest rates.
Mortgage interest rates fell from over 10% during the late-1990s, to below 4% between 2004 and 2006. Estonia managed to bring down inflation from 89% in 1992 to the single-digit level of 8.2% in 1998. Between 2002 and 2006, inflation was below 4.5% (an average of 3.3%).
As a consequence of the peg to the euro, interest rates in Estonia followed key rates set by the European Central Bank (ECB). Hence when the ECB began to raise key rates in mid-2005, mortgage rates also increased in Estonia. ECB base rates were gradually raised in 25 basis point steps, from 2% in October 2005 to 4% in May 2007, and again to 4.25% in July 2008.
Clearly these rates were lower than warranted by Estonia’s inflation. Yet the monetary authorities have been relatively powerless because the kroon’s peg to the euro means the central bank cannot raise interest rates further. Nevertheless there has been a divergence in mortgage rates between euro and kroon-denominated loans, with kroon-denominated mortgage rates rising above Euro rates.
Kroon-housing loan rate volatilityBy November 2008, the interest rates for kroon denominated housing loans were at 7.37%, up from below 4% from July 2004 to April 2006. For euro denominated loans, housing loan rates rose to 6.27% in October 2008, from below 4% from November 2004 to May 2006.
These interest rate hikes proved too much for Estonia’s housing market to bear and contributed to massive house price falls.
In an effort to ease the credit crunch and economic downturn, the ECB reduced key interest rates. It adjusted the key rate successively from 4.25% in September 2008 to 1% in May 2009, where the rate has remained until now. With this, the euro housing loan rate fell to 3.43% in February 2010.
Interest rates on kroon-denominated housing loans have been volatile since Q4 2008. For instance they fluctuated from 10.04% in October 2009, down to 5.89% in December, up again to 10.02% in January 2010 and down once more to 4.56% in February 2010.
OversupplyAfter the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, housing construction in Estonia dramatically decelerated. From 1996 to 2001 less than 1,000 dwellings were added to the dwelling stock annually - not enough to meet demand. Most apartments were sold before completion.
In 2001, housing construction started accelerating. In 2007, around 7,200 units were added to the dwelling stock, up from 5,100 units in 2006. Developers have been mainly building suburban homes and luxury apartments, for middle to upper class Estonians seeking to upgrade from their Soviet-era block buildings.
The massive increase in dwelling completions combined with the mismatch between demand and supply led to oversupply, pushing house prices down. Despite the decline in construction activity in 2008 and 2009, the overhang remains, due to the decline in foreign demand.
Constrained rents and yieldsThe construction of new apartments exerted pressure on rents, which have risen only modestly compared to property prices.
From Q1-2003 to Q4-2007, the average rent for 2 room flats in Tallinn rose 34%, while the selling price rose by 179%. For 3 room apartments, the average rent rose by a mere 10.6%, while prices soared 203%.
Relatively, stagnant rents combined with rocketing prices have lowered rental yields. From around 20% at the beginning of the decade, gross rental yields are now down to around 3% -4% per annum in 2009, according to Global Property Guide research.
Rents can be expected to move ahead now that prices have stalled – because those who would previously have bought are now somewhat more likely to choose to rent. But this has not happened yet:
- The average rent for 2-room apartments in Tallinn rose 8% in Q4 2009, compared with a 0.4% increase in prices.
- The average rent for 3-room apartments rose 2.7%, while selling prices fell 0.86%.
- However the average rent of 1-bedroom units (dwellings with a room and a kitchen) dropped 10.7%.
During the boom Estonia’s economy grew at Asian rates, earning it the moniker The Baltic Tiger.
The real growth spurt began in 2000, with 9.6% GDP growth. From 2001 to 2006, Estonia’s economy expanded by an average of 8.7% annually, including resounding 11.2% GDP growth in 2006 and 10.2% growth in 2005. In 2007, GDP growth was 7.1%, one of the highest economic growth rates in the EU.
GDP per capita increased from US$4,100 in 2000, to US$15,850 in 2007. Likewise, real wages rose by an average annual rate of 7.5% from 2001 to 2006. Unemployment fell from 13.6% in 2000 to just 4.7% in 2007.
The economy entered recession in Q3 2008 with GDP shrinking 3.3% from a year earlier (after a 1.1% y-o-y contraction to Q2 2008). GDP to 14.1% contraction in 2009. Real wages fell by 5% in 2009 while unemployment surged to 13.8%.
The recession is expected to ease in 2010 with GDP shrinking by 1%. Economic growth is expected to resume in 2011 with a 3% GDP increase. Nevertheless, unemployment is expected to rise to 15.5% in 2010 before easing to 14.7% in 2011.
Economic growth to slow in 2012During the boom Estonia’s economy grew at Asian rates, earning it the moniker The Baltic Tiger.
From 2000 to 2006, Estonia’s economy expanded by an average of 8.4% annually, including resounding 10.1% GDP growth in 2006, and 8.9% growth in 2005. In 2007, GDP growth was 7.5%, one of the highest growth rates in the EU. Unemployment fell from 13.7% in 2000, to just 4.7% in 2007.
The economy entered recession in Q3 2008, contracting by 3.7% in 2008, and by 14.3% in 2009. Unemployment surged to 13.8% in 2009.
As the country fell deeper into recession, the government cut spending by about 7.8% in 2009. It kept its income tax rates low, but hiked VAT by 2% to 20% in July 2009. By 2010 Estonian unemployment had risen to 17.3%.
The economy recovered in 2010 with GDP growth of 2.3% and a fiscal budget surplus. In January 2011, Estonia was the first country since the financial crisis to join the Eurozone.
Estonia had astounding growth of 7.6% in 2011, with strong exports. Unemployment fell to 12.5%.
In the third quarter of 2012, real GDP growth was 3.5% from a year earlier, bolstered by construction and export growth.
The unemployment rate dropped to 9.7% in the third quarter of 2012. Average monthly gross wages and salaries rose by 5.7% to €855 from the same period last year, after an annual increase of 5.9% in 2011, according to Statistics Estonia.
In December 2012, consumer prices rose by just 3.5% y-o-y, the weakest pace in 28 months, according to Statistics Estonia.
The Bank of Estonia, the country’s central bank, cut its GDP growth forecast for 2013 from 3.6% to 3%, mainly due to the eurozone debt crisis. Likewise, Swedbank also slashed its growth projections for Estonia in 2013 from 3.7% to 3.1%.
"Due to fragile external demand conditions in Nordic countries, export performance will remain weak over the first half of 2013. In addition, state-financed investments are expected to be somewhat smaller than in 2012," Swedbank said.
Estonia’s government debt to GDP ratio stood at 9.6% in the third quarter of 2012, the lowest government debt to GDP ratio in the EU, according to the Eurostat. The government aims to cut the budget deficit to 0.7% of GDP in 2013.
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