Rightmove – "60% rise in six-month profit"
August 31, 2007 at 10:45 am | In advertising, investment, media, rightmove | Leave a CommentSo much for the cooling market, it certainly ain’t cooling online, with Extate’s new money and Rightmove’s expanding profit margin, certainly the right place to be investing – at least for the moment:
[Reuters]
Rightmove Plc, which runs Britain’s busiest property website, reported on Friday 13.2 million pounds ($26.5 million) in underlying operating profit for the six months to end June, as the number of advertisers rose by 26 percent and visits to its property website increased by 58 percent.
“We expect to generate a similar level of year-on-year growth in the second half … Property agents have to sell houses in a slowing market, and so they are doing promotions … We do not see any noticeable deterioration in our business,” Managing Director Ed Williams told reporters.
He said the length of time properties were staying on the market was rising, however.
Britain’s housing market has slowed as five interest rate increases in less than a year to 5.75 percent and expectations of another hike to 6 percent damp buyer interest.
Rightmove earns subscription fees from its customers such as estate agents, rental agents and new home developers in exchange for allowing them to advertise properties, new developments and rental properties.[more]
Is this a good time to buy US property (part 1)
August 22, 2007 at 7:06 pm | In investment, subprime | 1 CommentWith all the sub-prime turmoil that’s happening stateside and the fact that house prices are dropping – even in Manhattan; plus the dropping US dollar, the question has to be asked, is it the right time to buy?
[update - I don't have the answer to this question, I'm hoping you could help me by dropping a comment, or sending an email. If you're in the States and know any great investment opportunities, feel free to share them with us]
Dilapidated Houses of Nevis
June 30, 2007 at 10:57 pm | In beach, caribbean, investment, nevis | 1 Comment
With its award winning hotels, Nevis has been one of the hottest and most sought after Caribbean destination for celebrities and the super wealthy.
Although not yet as sought after as neighboring Anguilla, the island has lots of charm and character that keeps tourists coming back year after year.
Recently the islands real estate market has been heating up, with lots of new beachside developments and multi-million villas currently on the market. I had the opportunity to revisit Nevis recently and although most of my friends on island kept wanting to show me the latest beachside development or multi-million dollar villa, I found myself drawn mostly to the dilapidated buildings in and around Charlestown, Nevis’ capital city (town).
Here are a couple shots I took on my mobile phone (forgot my camera in London; excuse the poor picture quality). Although most of these houses are in bad condition, to me they represent the best value for money on island because:
- they’re mostly unoccupied and have been for years, so once legal title (ownership) is ascertained, it should be relatively easy to strike a good deal, since the current owners are doing nothing with the properties
- most of these houses have been built with stones and the structures are incredibly sound, having withstood the test of time, and many hurricanes.
- a lot of these dilapidated properties are beachfront, with similar size plots with no building on them selling well in excess of US$1 million
If you’re interested in any of these properties or Nevis real estate in general, let me know and I’ll do my best to make it happen
Trump to invest in Romania???
April 26, 2007 at 1:09 pm | In donald trump, east-europe, europe, investment, romania | Leave a Comment
According to reports, he’s looking to “invest” 1 bln euro in Romania via the “Chamber of Real Estate Trade and the Association of Real Estate Investors”
What’s going on with subprime?
March 14, 2007 at 10:21 am | In ftse, investment, mortgage, stock market, subprime, wall street | 5 CommentsAll the talk on Wall Street and in the financial world this week has been centered around subprime mortgages and its effect on stock markets in particular and the overall economy in general. With the spectacular collapse of a few US based subprime lenders, many are proclaiming the end to end all ends. But is this really so?
Closing Specialist Diane Cipa in her blog offers some insider insight into the world of the subprime lender:
I believe subprime mortgage lenders and investment bankers factored into their risk analysis ridiculous lending standards and even probably accounted for a certain amount of borrower fraud. Anyone who makes loans without documentation and without borrower equity does so with open eyes. The yield offset the risk, so la-de-da.
The flaw in their analysis, the missing layer of risk to which lenders themselves were oblivious was fraud perpetrated by lending personnel, both inside employees and mortgage brokers. That’s the nasty secret blatantly obvious to me and I have to think many honest lending and title professionals. Maybe not. Maybe I just thought it had to be obvious because of my underwriting background.
I have wondered for years why lender quality control departments weren’t picking up the garbage and doing away with it.
Food for thought and as Buffett told us last week: be greedy when others are fearful, and fearful when others are greedy. I’m about to get my greed on
The Sheikh backing Candy&Candy
February 23, 2007 at 9:01 am | In investment, london, luxury | 3 Comments
It’s been recently revealed that Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani, the foreign minister of Qatar is the principle funder behind Candy & Candy’s One Hyde Park, rumored to be the most expensive apartments in the world, with average prices starting at £4,000/square foot.
Sheikh Hamad also made local business news recently, when it was announced that his property investment vehicle spent £90m on Sainsbury’s shares on the day that private equity groups launched a takeover bid for Britain’s second largest supermarket chain .
Exclusive opportunity in Dubai Sports City
February 16, 2007 at 12:20 pm | In dubai, investment | Leave a CommentThe 18 storey “Universal Tower”, a 5 star residential development in the heart of Dubai Sports City has just launched with prices ranging from 90,000 euro (£60,000) for a one bed apartment and 285,000 euro (£190,000) for a duplex penthouse apartment. The developer is offering exclusively via Renthusiast:
- Guaranteed 7.5% NET rental income for 3 years (buy-to-let investors only)
- Guaranteed 10% equity increase by March 2007
- Guaranteed fixed exchange rate
- Free car parking space (worth £7,500 euro)
- Free 42” plasma Television
It’s Official …
February 8, 2007 at 5:41 pm | In investment, search, zoomf | 14 CommentsLondon property search engine Zoomf.com has secured a major round of funding from venture capitalists HOWZAT Media LLP; although there’s currently no indication of how much money HOWZAT is actually putting into Zoomf, it is indeed a great achievement for a company that’s been around for just a little over 6 months. We’ve asked Zoomf executives for an indication of figures; so far no response; but we do know that HOWZAT is a group of private investors specializing in Internet investment, currently boasting US$10 million in investment capital. The group is headed by Hugo Burge and David Soskin, both of Cheapflights Ltd and Burge is also slated to join Zoomf’s board of directors, which is currently made up of
- CEO Rod Dowler a former KPMG partner;
- “technology wizard” Dr David Romano-Critchley formerly of Espotting;
- Business Development director Mike Carter, a veteran online advertising executive, having worked for MIVA, Ask Jeeves, Touch local and others;
- and of course Product Director Ivailo Jordanov, also formerly with Espotting Media.
From the release:
HOWZAT co-founder and Vice-Chairman of Cheapflights Ltd., Hugo Burge
“We were attracted to investing in Zoomf not only because of their cutting edge product but also because of the wealth of experience in the founding team. The Zoomf team has a raft of experience in online media, pan-European roll-out, search engine technology and the management of growth organisations. We are confident that they will use the funds raised further to innovate and introduce new products to meet the needs of both consumers and the property sector.”
Rod Dowler, Zoomf Chief Executive added, “HOWZAT is an ideal source of funding for us. Not only is HOWZAT focused on dotcoms such as ours, its management has had hands-on experience of developing and growing Cheapflights – one of the UK’s most successful vertical search sites, both in the UK and in the USA. They are a perfect partner for us.”
He added,” Our goal is to create something that’s both agent and consumer-centric, providing a superb service in one of the most economically important sectors in the UK. At present, Zoomf is available only to London agents, but we intend to roll it out nationwide later this year. Zoomf will eventually provide the opportunity for free property listings to every estate agent office in the UK”.
David Soskin, the CEO of Cheapflights and co-founder of HOWZAT, concluded by adding: “We very much look forward to working with this ‘dream team’ and helping them move from beta start-up to successful international company. All the ingredients feel right; now begins the hard work to make it happen.”
Job well done and in the words of Ivailo Jordanov “Game on!”
Tenants May Gain Clout in Office-Rental Market
January 4, 2007 at 9:36 am | In commercial, investment, research | Leave a CommentBy JENNIFER S. FORSYTH
Office landlords had a heyday in 2006 as rents rose at the fastest pace in six years. Yet there are signs that conditions could be turning a little more in the favor of tenants.
Newly released data by Reis Inc., a New York real-estate research firm, show that office rents rose 9% nationally last year, the heftiest increase since the height of the technology boom in 2000. However, the report also found that demand for new office space slowed sharply near the end of last year, a sign that large rent increases may not continue.
Demand for office space is measured by tracking the “absorption” rate, a closely watched number that quantifies the change in the net amount of occupied space. In the fourth quarter, tenants in the nation’s 79 largest markets absorbed a net 7.6 million square feet of space, according to Reis, compared with 11.6 million in the third quarter and 15.9 million in the second.
“It is clear that investors cannot expect the same pace of rent growth without a more cooperative level of net absorption,” said Lloyd Lynford, Reis’ chief executive. He noted that slowing growth in demand for office space tracks closely with the slowdown in employment growth in the second half.
Throughout most of last year, many companies took big blocks of office space, hoping to lock in rents before they moved higher. But several months ago, the mood began to change, real-estate experts say. “Now people are waiting to see what will happen in the economy,” said Barry Gosin, chief executive of Newmark Knight Frank, a real-estate services firm. “It’s not an ominous sign, but it’s certainly not as heated as it was.”
If companies continue to hold off renting more space, landlords are unlikely to be able to command the hefty rent increases they saw last year. In the fourth quarter, the increases in effective rent — the amount tenants pay after concessions — were as high as 5% in some markets and averaged 2.3% nationwide.
Real-estate experts say it is too early for property investors to panic, even at a time in which office buildings continue to sell at record prices and yields, or initial returns on investments, are at an all-time low.
The national absorption number somewhat masks the strong demand that continues in some markets — often in the very ones where record sales have caused mouths to drop, said Chuck Schreiber, chief executive of KBS Realty Advisors, Newport Beach, Calif.
Moreover, Mr. Schreiber said, the biggest risk to the office market — overbuilding — doesn’t seem to be a concern, at least in many of the hottest markets, as land and construction costs continue to limit new supply. According to Reis, 72 million square feet of office space should be opened nationally this year — the highest level in several years but well below the 126 million that opened in 2001.
Even so, that amount of new construction is enough to put upward pressure on vacancy rates, said Reis’s Mr. Lynford. The national vacancy rate finished last year at 13.3%, sustaining its tiniest drop in 10 quarters, at 0.2%.
Some of the cities that saw the strongest growth in effective rents in the fourth quarter will be hard-pressed to replicate those numbers going forward, Mr. Lynford said. Flashy results in some markets over just one quarter could indicate that landlords cut back significantly on concessions designed to lure new tenants — such as a year of free rent.
Now, Mr. Lynford said, to sustain similar levels of effective-rent growth, they must cut back further on concessions or drastically raise their asking rental rates — options which may be hard to justify with demand slowing.
Yet, in Houston, a city that saw 4.9% effective rent growth in the fourth quarter, brokers said demand for space — particularly in the central business district — is as strong as they can remember, thanks to the energy sector’s continued growth. Though rents per square foot in Houston remain low by the standards of pricier markets such as Boston, San Francisco, and New York, some landlords there were able to raise their rates twice or three times in 2006, said Steve Biegel, senior vice president for Studley, a tenant representation firm.
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Copyright 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The REIT advantage
January 2, 2007 at 8:20 pm | In UK, investment, reits | Leave a CommentUK Real Estate Investment Trusts (Reits) launched officially yesterday. The Guardian has an FAQ on how they function, quoting Stephen Herring of BDO Stoy Hayward saying that not only does a Reits investor avoid paying corporation tax and capital gains, can also avoid paying tax on their dividend income if their shares are held, say, in an ISA or a self invested personal pension (SIPP). The Guardian claims some experts argue that property market is peaking and investing now might prove to be a mistake, despite the attractive tax breaks.
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