Showing posts with label Leipzig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leipzig. Show all posts

Friday, 1 June 2018

Leipzig is Planning to Identify 4 Areas for "Milieuschutz" - Gentrification Protection

The city of Leipzig is planning to identify four areas for protection restricting certain activities by landlords, like title split or luxury modernisation. The application of federal law  is called "Städtebauliches Erhaltungsgebiet" or "Milieuschutz". The consequences are described in detail in this article on this blog: The Can Do and Can't Do Renovating Apartments in Certain Areas of Berlin
It applies to Leipzig as well.

Von Frank Vincentz - Eigenes Werk, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=53288072


For more background information in German: http://www.lvz.de/Leipzig/Lokales/Leipzig-will-Milieuschutz-gegen-steigende-Mieten-einfuehren


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Monday, 8 January 2018

Eastern Germany Property Market Report and Investment Opportunities

The Berlin Residential Property Market has been on the forefront of the German property boom of the last 2 years and signs are pointing at a continuation of this trend. With increasing rents, purchase prices are rising as well and lately faster than the rent level. See Rent levels in the German Big 7.
As a reaction, investors are looking for alternative locations with similar prospects for the future but lower price levels. One of the obvious choices could be East Germany with a generally still lower price level. But caution is required: Some of the regions have been losing population while others have (re-)gained workplaces and inhabitants.
Research on alternative locations is complex and wrong decisions can be costly. To help your assessments for informed decision making we enclose the link to this report at the bottom of this message.

Through our Network we can provide 3 investment opportunities in this region

1. Multi-tenant home Leipzig with development potential, balconies
04179 Leipzig
asking price € 930k€
642.31 m²
33,807.72€ net rent p.a.
potential for increase
2. Multi-tenant home Leipzig with balconies
04177 Leipzig
asking price € 1,270k
581 m²
38,200.08€ net rent p.a.
potential for increase
3. Multi-tenant home in attractive location in Halle
06110 Halle
asking price € 650k
571 m²
34,619.64€ net rent p.a.
at its current potential


For more information on these properties, please contact me directly
uwe.falkenberg@falkenberg-solutions.com
_________________________________


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Friday, 23 October 2015

Germany City Ranking 2015: Munich 1, Berlin 2, Leipzig 3 and Frankfurt 4



The HWWI/Berenberg City Ranking 2015 is out. Some major shifts have occurred. For the first time Munich beat always first Frankfurt for No.1. Seven years ago when the first study was published Berlin was at No. 24 it has now reach No.2. No.3 is still not Frankfurt, it is Leipzig which has constantly made its way up the ladder from No.12 last year. Only then ranking at 4 is Frankfurt.

The ranking is determined by economic strength, demographic and other factors. One of the focus points for future developments is the positioning towards highly qualified workforce.

For the other positions of the 30 largest German cities please refer to the graph below and the full report in German at https://www.berenberg.de/fileadmin/user_upload/berenberg2013/Publikationen/HWWI_Staedteranking/2015-10-05_Staedteranking_ANSICHT_FINAL.PDF

HWWI-Berenberg City Ranking 2015 Summary Index
Source: https://www.berenberg.de/fileadmin/user_upload/berenberg2013/Publikationen/HWWI_Staedteranking/2015-10-05_Staedteranking_ANSICHT_FINAL.PDF


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Sunday, 22 July 2012

Migration Inside The Europe, Millions of East Germans returning home

Migration Inside The Europe, Millions of East Germans returning home

Many of the millions of east Germans who flocked to the west of the country to take jobs after the Berlin Wall fell are now returning home, a study to be published Thursday showed.

European Phoenix -- In 2010 alone more than 40,000 people born in communist East Germany who had moved west went back to the region, according to research conducted by the Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography in the eastern city of Leipzig.


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Wednesday, 27 February 2008

Leipzig Plagwitz, Apartment building price 670,000 € yield 7.8%

Leipzig Plagwitz, Fully let Apartment building with 13 apartments 1 commercial unit and 6 parking spaces. Actual net rent 52.264 € p.a., price 670,000 € factor 12.8, net yield 7.8%(plus commission).

More information on www.properties-in-germany.de


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Tuesday, 26 February 2008

Leipzig Residential Rental Market - Investor Information on Rent Level and Location

Leipzig has been the target of many international property investors over the last 24 months. Here are some of the hard facts why Leipzig has attracted over 1.6 billion Euros in investment capital during 2006 alone.

The economic situation in Germany and especially in Leipzig is positive with the prospect of at least mid-term prosperity. The property market has three main drivers for income improvement:

1. Positive population development accompanied by new jobs.

2. Reduction of vacant apartments by demolishing ca. 20,000 "outdated" apartments by 2010.

3. Active owners interested and acting on improvement of their rental income situation.

But as you know just being in the right region or city does not guarantee that the property offered is actually in a good location. This article will show the current rent structure in Leipzig and some of the sought after locations and which ones are on the rise. For background information on the economic development of the region and the current situation please refer to the details at the end of this article*).

The Leipzig Residential Property Market

The City of Leipzig has an official rent table which is dated 2005. A new one is being established in 2008. The current rent levels are from market research carried out by HVB and Eurohypo, two leading German property finance banks.

The rent level for renovated, medium standard and medium size apartments (70 sqm) is on average at 3.85 Euro per sqm in pre fabricated blocks and 4.40 -- 4.70 Euro per sqm in blocks built before 1945. For inner city prime locations the rent per sqm for the same standard and size is at 6 -- 7.50 Euro per sqm. Small apartments up to 45 sqm generate the highest rent in all categories and are on average at 5 Euro per sqm.

The rent table distinguishes locations between "Very Good", "Good", "Medium" and "Basic". The spread in the rent level for new rentals in these categories are:

Very Good: 6 -- 7.50 Euro per sqm

Good: 5 -- 7.50 Euro per sqm

Medium: 4 -- 5 Euro per sqm

Basic: 3 -- 4 Euro per sqm

Locations being categorized as "very good" can be found in City South, Gohlis, Schleussig, Leutzsch to name a few. Rents in good standard modernized period buildings are rising. Especially in preferred areas like Waldstrassenviertel, Musikerviertel, Bachviertel, Schleußig and Gohlis-Süd an increase in rent of 10 to 15% over the next 2 years is expected.

The good and very good locations mentioned above are only specific regions within the districts named and they can be right next to an area that is considered basic. So it is very important to have reliable information about the actual micro location of a property. I have yet to see an agent's exposé declaring the location of his offer as being basic. There are maps and street registers available that are based on statistics developed for the official rent table (Mietspiegel). This rent table plays an important role in German residential rent legislation. It is the main legal basis for raising the rent in existing contracts.

Next to the factor location there is a growing trend towards smaller apartments for single occupancy, especially near the university and other teaching institutions. Even though they achieve the highest rent an investor has to keep in mind that from experience these smaller apartments have a higher turnover with the risk of temporary vacancy and renovation cost.

*) What makes the Leipzig Residential Property Market so interesting? By Uwe Falkenberg

The author is a Berliner and active in the German property market for more than 25 years. Experienced as project manager, developer and head of the German Business for a UK based property consultancy he now owns and operates Berlin Portfolio Ltd His international background and local expertise is an ideal combination for an international investor. For Property Search we recommend Properties in Germany


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Sunday, 24 February 2008

Leipzig Residential Property Market -- What makes an Investment so Interesting?

The economic environment

The outlook for the German economy is positive and the economic upturn is continuing. 2008 will see a change from purely export driven growth to more growth support through domestic demand. For the first time in years significant raises in salaries are currently negotiated and the consumer climate can be seen as friendly. This will be associated with further reduction in unemployment, as companies are prepared to take on staff. Growth in the economy can be expected to stimulate the German property market.

The Local Aspect

Many of the major investments went into the federal state of Saxony with the main focus points in the state capital of Dresden and the traditional economic center of Leipzig. With regard to the economic growth Saxony has pushed Bavaria off the first rank amongst the German states.

BMW has opened a new production plant near Leipzig, Porsche is extending their capacities to produce a 4-door-sedan and DHL the logistics subsidiary of the German Post has decided to develop their new logistics turntable in Leipzig at the Halle-Leipzig-Airport which will be operational in 2008. Here investments will be 300 Million and will directly create 3,500 jobs with another 7,000 indirectly related jobs and another 10,000 in the car sector.

The German Property Market

Germany has seen a major influx of international capital to its property market over the last 2-3 years with record year 2006 which was considered a record year still being outranked by 2007. The year 2008 is seen by most market players as a year of consolidation. Increasing numbers of institutional investors will become sellers which should offer interesting opportunities for smaller and private investors as it is unlikely that all sales will be in large packages.

The Leipzig Property Market

Leipzig is one of the few places in former East Germany with a positive population development which is expected to keep going at least until 2012. At the same time the city runs a program to demolish old unsuitable pre-fabricated housing blocks and thus take pressure from the residential market. It started out with 1,000 apartments in 2006 and will be continued until 2010 with a goal to reduce by 20,000 apartments. The statistical vacancy rate in 2005 was at ca 16% but half of these were not accepted by the rental market and did not constitute a competition for prospect tenants reducing the market active vacancy rate at its highest in 2005 to 8% (EUROHYPO).

In 2006 over 1.6 billion in property value were traded in Leipzig out of which 26% were apartment blocks. The figures for 2007 will be slightly higher with approximately the same share of residential buildings. The vast majority of these apartment blocks were bought by foreign investors with an investment perspective of 5 to 10 years. The objective is to improve the rent and drive yield and value. This will push for an increase in rents.

Conclusions

The economic situation in Germany and especially in Leipzig is positive with the prospect of at longer lasting prosperity. The property market has three main drivers for income improvement:

1. Positive population development accompanied by new jobs.

2. Reduction of vacant apartments by demolishing ca. 20,000 "outdated" apartments by 2010.

3. Active owners interested and acting on improvement of their rental income situation.

This looks all very positive but there are still many investments on offer you should stay away from. With a follow-up article I will provide information about the rent in different parts of Leipzig and vicinity. You will find this article on the Property Investment in Germany blog.

The author is a Berliner and active in the German property market for more than 25 years. Experienced as project manager, developer and head of the German Business for a UK based property consultancy he now owns and operates Berlin Portfolio Ltd His international background and local expertise is an ideal combination for an international investor. For Property Search we recommend Properties in Berlin


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