Montevideo Aerial

Luxury projects are being built in Montevideo neighborhoods like Punta Carretas, Pocitos and Malvín

Earlier this month InvestBA reported on the recent gains in the Buenos Aires real estate market: closings up 37%, total value of all sales up 57% and median prices up 15%. Now the news from across the river is equally encouraging and offers more evidence of regional strength following a weak 2009 for both countries.

Uruguay’s National Statistics Institute released housing data for the first quarter of 2010, and the total number of closings is up 18% compared to 1Q09. The total dollar amount of all 15,015 real estate transactions in the first quarter of 2010 also rose 32% compared to 1Q09; yet, when adjusting from U.S. dollars to Uruguayan pesos the increase was a more modest 9.3%. (As evident on this XE.com chart, the U.S. dollar has fallen 18% against the peso over the past year.)

Looking at the most recent month of available data, the most real estate closings took place in Montevideo (34%), Maldonando (13%), Canelones (12%), Cerro Largo (6%) and Colonia (5%). The median price per square meter of all transactions in the first quarter rose 6% over 1Q09, while the Construction Cost Index (construction costs less land value) posted a modest 5% gain over 1Q09.

News was also positive for property owners in the Uruguay rental market, as average rental prices rose 6% in the first quarter to US$342. The three most expensive markets for renters were Punta Carretas, Pocitos and Malvín with median rental rates of US$418, $394 and $387, respectively. (Full Report PDF in Spanish)

For more information about investment opportunities in Uruguay including several estancias, download the new issue of InvestBA Privada and watch video tours of InvestBA listings:

Canelones Estancia – US$1,500,000

Punta del Este Citrus Estancia – US$2,500,000

La Paloma Waterfront – US$3,500,000

Condo inventory is moving again in Miami, but BA makes a better case for flight to quality.

Condo inventory is moving again in Miami, but BA makes a better case for flight to quality.

Crisis meant opportunity for investors in Buenos Aires real estate back in 2002, so—perhaps sensing blood and short sales in the high-rise waters of Miami-Dade—one BA investment advisor wonders if similar opportunities await Buenos Aires buyers in Miami in 2010.

“Median prices in Miami have already fallen 35% from the 2006 peak…and the average recession lasts five years,” writes Marcelo Elbaum of Convexity Asset Management. The abundance of finished units and foreclosures, he reasons, offers investor groups the ability to be picky and even purchase entire buildings from developers, sometimes for as little as $50,000 per unit.

Recent reports from Miami suggest that, of the 23,000 new units built in the Downtown/Brickell/Biscayne Corridor, only 7,300 remain unsold. In addition, high-rise inventory in the under-$300,000 market is down to a six-month supply; much of it snatched up in recent months by foreign investors.

But before pulling the trigger on a condo in the 305, Elbaum brings his readers back to Buenos Aires and recommends a calm, comparative analysis in their own backyard. This pause for additional due diligence reveals a market where the advantages may be greater for the individual investor. Statistics show there is considerable strength in the BA market for properties priced under-$65,000, while sales of 1 and 2-room apartments jumped 53% over last year.

Furthermore, BA real estate advisors will tell you the continued buying motivation in BA is a refugio de valor. And therein lies the main difference with Miami, where the recent buying surge is less emblematic of a flight to quality and perhaps more indicative of a Sunshine State sequel: Return of the Flippers.

For more information about Buenos Aires real estate opportunities, download IncomeBA and the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

 

Bariloche

Mendoza

Uruguay

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