many countries affected by low or negative growth
03 September 2008 
 
The house price slump that began in the US and Britain is spreading across the globe, according to international property experts Knight Frank, which said yesterday that steep declines are now taking place across Europe and into Asia.

New Zealand, Denmark and Lithuania have joined the group of countries where house prices are falling, which includes Japan, Germany, Ireland and Israel as well as Britain and the US. The country recording the sharpest fall is Latvia, with house prices plummeting by 24.1% over the past year.  Even countries where prices have not fallen are witnessing a rapid deceleration in price increases. In South Africa, the rate of house price inflation has collapsed from 15.5% this time last year to 3.8% and is expected to be negative soon. In France, Spain and Greece, price growth has halved and is running below 3.2%.

The only countries to have bucked the trend are Bulgaria, Slovakia, Cyprus and the Czech Republic, where house price growth has accelerated. Last year's fastest-growing market, Russia, which was seeing house prices rising at an astonishing 53.7% in the second quarter of 2007, has dropped back to a growth rate of 26.5%.

Nick Barnes, head of international research at Knight Frank, said: "The index shows that global house price inflation is continuing to fall back, with much of continental Europe now seeing low or negative growth ... Housing markets in countries such as Spain, Denmark, the UK and Ireland are all being severely challenged by the global credit squeeze."

"There is less demand for owner-occupied property in Germany than in many other European countries and there is no shortage of supply," Knight Frank says.
In Spain, the Knight Frank index records a price rise of 2.4% annually, but it warns that falls are now almost inevitable.  Investors who bought second homes in Bulgaria have reason to feel bullish. Knight Frank said current annual price growth is 32.2%, only slightly lower than the 33.7% rate recorded in the first quarter.

Patrick Collinson The Guardian, www.guardian.co.uk