Category: Appreciating Assets

17 Irish owned properties totally over €1m sold in Moscow

Over 100 investors lined up for viewing trips as Bulgaria remains the most popular location for Russian buyers

14th November, 2011; Dublin, Ireland: Appreciating Assets, the Irish firm that specialises in helping people sell property to buyers from Russia and the former Soviet Union, has recently returned from a successful trip to The Moscow International Investment Show last month, where it sold 17 Irish owned properties valued at over €1m in only two days.

A further 100 buyers have signed up for inspection trips to view properties before the end of the year. The inspection trips are not funded by Appreciating Assets, they are funded by the investors, ensuring they are serious buyers.
Continue reading “17 Irish owned properties totally over €1m sold in Moscow” »

Media in Northern Ireland – Dylan Cullen of Appreciating Assets

Sometimes you just have to get in a car and travel to see the media the old way. Last week I went with Dylan Cullen, of Appreciating Assets, to Northern Ireland and met all the newspapers. Here’s the first two piece of coverage in The Belfast Telegraph and The Newsletter.

Belfast Telegraph 23.6.11

Dylan Cullen of Appreciating Assets on RTE Radio 1′s ‘The Business’ with George Lee

Dylan Cullen the Managing Director of Appreciating Assets was invited on George Lee’s show ‘The Business’ last week, which airs on RTE Radio 1 each week

Irish People’s experience of foreign property investment varies

When I first moved over to Ireland a did bit of work in the overseas property market. I saw how the lack of regulation in the sector meant that a lot overseas property companies were taking advantage of investors and there were very sharp practices.
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I started to help people analyse their investments and separate the wheat from the chaff as it were – let’s just say there was much wheat to make bread from. The thing that struck was that despite the huge amounts of money involved a lot of people did very little research. We save a lot of people a lot of money including one building who was about to invest over half a million euro with Kendar, the company formerly owned by rogue solicitor Michael Lynn.
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We also had a number of people who going to buy in risky markets like Dubai and Bulgaria and helped by in low risk cities such as Frankfurt. I spoke to a couple of these investors recently and they are extremely grateful for the advice because their investments have kept their value, whereas they could’ve lost a lot of money if they had gone through with their original intentions.
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Since then my work has focused on trying to help investors whose developments have run into problems or those that fear they could lose the money they’ve invested. I work with Anthony Joyce & Co to help investors with my role focusing on raising the profile of the legal action in order to bring in more investors, there’s strength in numbers, and also brings pressure to bear on developers and agents through the media, which can often be very effective.
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Below is an article that recently appeared in The Southern Star, written by Con Power, whom remembered the work I have been undertaking. I also work Appreciating Assets who help investors that have their properties (the lucky ones) sell them on to Russian investors.

Here’s the article. Please click to see more:

Article featuring Simon Palmer in The Southern Star

Russian Hope For Irish Investors

There was a great article on Appreciating Assets in The Sunday Business Post’s Property section. The front page story and page two focused on their niche poperty agency which connects Irish owners of overseas property with Russian investors. Russians are now oe of the few nationalities still investing in overseas property, partcularly in countries like Bulgaria.

Dylan Cullen of Appreciating Assests started working there on commercial investments in the mid noughties and was asked by his Bulgarian contacts if he knew any Irish and British investors who owned property there. The problem for the Bulgarian was and still is that they get contacted Russian investors wanting to buy property, but unlike the Irish, Russians will not buy off-plan and most of the newly completed property there is owned by Irish and British investors. This is where Appreciating Assets come in, they help owners of overseas property find Russian buyers.

Here is the full article.

The Sunday Business Post – Russian hope for Irish investors
21 November 2010 By Michelle Devane 

The Irish obsession with overseas real estate became so extreme that, at the height of the market, people were buying properties abroad without ever stepping foot in the country where they were purchasing.

These investors found it was very simple process to buy overseas properties, but it’s a different story trying to sell them.

Thousands of Irish people bought overseas properties in the last decade, and many are now suffering losses as a result of the collapse in property prices and economic deterioration across Europe.

Instead of heading abroad on inspection trips to buy property as they did in the past, an increasing number of Irish people are now trying to sell their overseas investments – that’s if construction of the property was completed in the first place. 

An increasing number of second-hand holiday properties throughout Europe are coming back on the market, as overseas owners realise that they can no longer afford to pay second mortgages.

In many cases, the Irish invested between 2000 and 2007 when prices were spiralling.

Those who invested in later years are, in many cases, facing financial problems, and cannot afford to hold on to the property hoping for the economy to improve.

The Irish are not the only investors in this predicament. 

An estimated 1.2 million Spanish holiday homes are for sale, owned by a wide range of international investors.

Few people, except the very wealthy, are in the market for a holiday home, despite drastic price reductions.

There’s no longer a strong resale market for second-hand properties as Irish and British investors, who once dominated sales, have stopped buying.

Dylan Cullen, managing director of property investment firm Appreciating Assets, realised that Irish investors would have to look to other markets in their attempts to sell overseas investments.

Three years ago, he began helping Irish and British overseas property investors to sell their assets.

The firm specialises in selling Bulgarian investment properties, to Russian investors in particular.

Cullen has experience in a number of overseas markets including Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and France. He began investing in the Bulgarian commercial property market in 2006 when his friend, who was dating a Bulgarian, convinced him to go to the country to examine its investment opportunities. 

‘We bought and sold, made investments, gave seed capital to builders, filled the gap and were paid handsomely for it,” Cullen said.

He did not develop properties in Bulgaria, but managed to build contacts in the property market. ‘‘Because of the level of activity that wealthy Russian investment funds had in Bulgaria at the time, we ended up with a good contact list of estate

agents and developers in Bulgaria and estate agents in Russia,” he said.

‘‘As the market started to turn, we started getting contacted by people finding it difficult to sell their properties and asking for help.

We looked at our list of contacts and realised we could offer a service.” That was in late 2007. 

Since then, Appreciating Assets has focused on reselling residential properties and acting as a broker between Irish and British sellers, and estate agents in Russia. 

The company has recently expanded to include other Russian investment hotspots such as Spain and Portugal.

For a fee of €50 per month, the firm creates a sales brochure for its clients that’s then marketed to Russian and Bulgarian estate agents. Appreciating Assets’ website becomes a database for the Russian estate agents, and the company receives commission for any transactions.

Cullen said that the company has sold over 230 property in the past two years for its clients. 

The Dublin-based firm employs full-time professional valuers and agents in Bulgaria and Russia. In total, it has 11 employees.

‘‘We’ve two full-time staff in Russia who call estate agents to promote the properties.

We’ve got staff in Bulgaria who are on the ground, who go check out developments for us, talk to local agents [and] get the local knowledge of what properties are actually changing hands at.”

Cullen said that many of his clients were keen to sell their overseas assets because they had built up equity in their Irish properties to cover these purchases. Cullen said that, in many cases, his clients’ Bulgarian property was their only unencumbered asset.

‘‘There’s a lot of value there for people if they can sell their Bulgarian property; €50,000 in Ireland today is worth €80,000 three to four years ago. 

That’s [probably] their last unencumbered asset; they can choose what they wish to do with that property – not like if they sell their house in Dublin. If they sell that, the bank takes back the money.”

Cullen said one of his clients had just completed the sale of a two-bedroom apartment at Sunset Resort in Bourgas on the Black Sea coast in Bulgaria.

She sold the property for €55,000 to a Russian investor.

‘‘I can’t remember the last time we sold to someone other than a Russian. The Russian economy is very strong. I genuinely consider the Russians are the new Irish, in that there’s a huge amount of them that are only feeling some sort of financial security in recent years.

There’s a real rising middleclass over there,” he said.

‘‘Historically, the Russians are also very comfortable in Bulgaria. If you go down to the Black Sea during the summer months, there’s a huge mixture of Russians, Irish and English.”

Russian buyers are showing resilience to worldwide trends of negatively towards property investment. 

According to CIA research, the Russian economy is faring much better than many other European countries, despite having recorded a fall in GDP of 7.9 per cent in 2009. It was hit hard by the 2008-2009 global economic crisis, as oil prices plummeted and foreign credits that Russian banks and firms relied on dried up. 

However, the economic decline appeared to bottom out in mid-2009 and, by the second half of the year, there were signs that the economy was growing, albeit slowly. 

The International monetary Fund (IMF) has forecast that within three years the Russian economy will be the second largest in Europe after Germany. 

The IMF expects the Russian economy to grow by 4.25 per cent in 2010.

Owning international property is fast becoming the status symbol of choice for Russia’s middle-class, just as it was in Ireland during the economic boom. 

Russian buyers are not attracted by off-plan properties, instead they want completed units, so they represent a potential market for Irish sellers.

Liam Bailey, head of residential research at Knight Frank in London, said Russian buyers were leading the demand for prime property in London and other European cities. ‘‘Russian buyers have had a considerable influence in London in the last decade.

They’ve been buying in prime market such as the south of France, the Alps, Switzerland and to an extent in Paris,” said Bailey.

‘‘The Russian economy is still going strong; their drive is to buy property and they’d rather buy it overseas than at home. There are many Russians looking to acquire assets at lower prices, and they are interested in Bulgaria as a leisure destination.

‘‘Wealthy Russians are targeting the south of France, but the middle classes are buying in Bulgaria because of its close proximity, and it’s low prices,” he said. ‘‘Eighteen months ago it wasn’t known how far the Bulgarian market would fall, but now investors are more confident about prices and there’s some stability.”

Ac cording to Knight Frank’s research, prices have fallen by 32 per cent in Bulgaria since the peak of its property market in the third quarter of 2008.

Bailey said property prices had been dropping quite rapidly until June of this year, but prices seemed to be stabilising, as they slipped only slightly in the third quarter. ‘‘It would appear the bottom of the market has been reached there and there’s more confidence among buyers,” he said.

Figures released last month by Russian property website www.1-property.ru found that Bulgaria was the most popular destination for investment out of 30 countries among those surveyed on its website.

During July and August, the website recorded 359,173 searches, with 60 per cent of these searches for apartments and condos.

The Black Sea resorts of Sunny Beach and Sozopol came first and third, respectively, in its top regional table.

The second most popular destination for investment was Spain, with its coastal resort of Costa Blanca coming second in the regional table. 

The majority of those surveyed were interested in purchasing properties within the €50,000 and €150,000 price bracket.

Cullen was adamant that property could be sold in the downturn, and said investors had to be realistic about price.

‘‘There’s no point dwelling on it. One of the things I say to customers constantly is that I cannot guarantee I’ll sell your property. I will put your property with a number of estate agents that have a track record in selling properties like yours, but I’m not guaranteeing I’ll sell your property,” he said.

He said that Appreciating Assets did not advocate selling overseas properties at distressed prices and that even though prices were down, sellers could get the current value for their asset if it was marketed well and in very good condition.

He said it was a ‘‘huge misperception’’ that everyone that bought property in Bulgaria or overseas lost money. ‘‘That’s wrong. I’m not saying they made huge profits, but there’s a lot of people getting out with roughly what they paid, or taking a small haircut. 

Then there’s people who bought ridiculously, and that’s life.”

In many instances, he said his clients had to sort out major issues with their properties before they could sell them.

Like Ireland, difficulties with poor management companies are one of the most common issues that need to be rectified before they can sell. Cullen said one investor took control of the management company at a development which was mostly Irish-owned, because proper up-keep of the communal areas was not being maintained.

Once the communal areas were made attractive, he was then able to sell the property on.

‘‘My advice for someone who wants to sell is to find an agent you can have a decent rapport with.

Be realistic about your asking price, shop around – get your property valued by a number of companies, don’t just take one person’s word for it.

‘‘Ask the questions about the value of selling it quickly or over a few months; ask the agent how you can get more money for it and what you can do with the property to improve the chances of it selling,” he said.

For further information, contact Appreciating Assets on 01-6141300 or e-mail in fo@appreciatingassets.ie.

Russians helping to ease the pain of overseas property investors

I dread to think how much money has left this country over the last few years spent on overseas property; a lot of it never to return.

There are now many problems with stalled developments that Irish people have invested in right across the globe. I am currently supporting the Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co on six different cases. In a lot of instances the developers didn’t sell enough of the properties to finish the developments, but have spent the money paid by the initial investors.

Where people have been lucky enough to get their hands on finished property the values are now much lower than they were during their boom. If people bought early enough, say pre-2005 and in some cases 2006, then they can still make a profit because some markets we climbing by such large amounts that even with a 50% reduction they are still above what investors will have paid.

The problem came with the people that were late to the sector and paid peak prices. Their problems are compounded by the fact that a lot people remortgaged their primary residence in Ireland many off whom are not left paying very large mortgages in Ireland, that are in negative equity and which we used to pay of an overpriced overseas property that is now well below it’s peak. They effectively have two or properties that are in negative equity.

Whilst most agents who sold overseas property have gone bankrupt or run off with their high commission before the investors come after them, one company [disclosure: they are a client of Republic] is turning the overseas property market on it’s head and helping investor sell on their properties.

Appreciating Assets started by developing commercial sites along European Strategic Corridors in Eastern European countries like Bulgaria. Here they made good contacts with the no-nonsense down to earth way of doing business and struck up some long term partnerships.

The Russians have always been keen to do business and pleasure in former Eastern Bloc countries like Bulgaria. During the boom it was the Irish and British investor that we dominant on the Black Sea and in the ski resorts, but as the economies in their countries waned so demand from Russia remained strong.

But, there was problem, Russian property investors don’t buy off-plan and most of the recently built properties were owned by Irish and British investors. Whilst they Bulgarian businesses had good contacts with Russia they had little or no existing contacts in Ireland and the UK. This is where Appreciating Assets were asked to step in, their Bulgarian contacts needed them to help target Irish and UK property investors who wanted to sell their property. This is a niche that they have successfully turned their sights on and in the past 18th months have helped over 230 property owners sell their properties to Russian buyers.

Now they are expanding. They have asked if they can also provide properties to Russian buyers in the more upmarket locations in Western Europe where Russian investors are now buying. Seafront properties are very popular Russians who are very prominent prestige buyers on the Costa Del Sol and Côte d’Azur, as well as the French Alps.

So Appreciating Assets have now expanded their services to property owners in France and Spain, two countries where Irish and British property buyers were prolific during the boom.

It is rare to see a property investment company expanding during a property slump, but the reality is that their niche market is actually booming. This is because the downturn and financial pressure at home has meant so many people need to sell their properties. When times are tight that house in sun can look like an expensive luxury and most people bought the property as an investment anyway with the intention of selling.

If investors want to sell their overseas property then an exit strategy is key. By exit strategy I mean how the property is going to be sold. There is little point trying to sell it to Irish investors because they simply aren’t buying, so investors need to look to countries that are still expanding and where affluence is still increasing, such as Russia and use companies that have a track record of dealing with people there.

The good thing about Russia is that it hasn’t fallen into recession and the outlook looks good. There is a lot of talk these days about the investment markets focusing on the BRIC countries, and Russia is one of these; the others are Brazil, India and China. The IMF backs this up and forecasts that Russia will be the second largest economy in Europe within three years; second only to Germany.

So if you have any overseas property that you want to sell in France, Spain or Bulgaria then sell it to the Russians by contacting Appreciating Assets – please click here fore details.

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Want to sell your overseas investment property? Then establishing an exit strategy is key.

This is guest post by Dylan Cullen, Managing Director of Dublin based investment firm Appreciating Assets Ltd. Appreciating Assets specialises in helping Irish and UK overseas property investors market and sell their properties to Russian investors.

This article also appeared in the July 2010 issue of You And Your Money the Irish personal finance magazine.

During the Celtic Tiger, developers from all over the world marketed and sold property to Irish investors. As a result it seems as if we paid for half the buildings in Eastern Europe.

In previous generations we would have had Irish workers doing the actual building but, in recent years, with the cheap credit we had access to, we were happy to pay other people to do the building and just wanted to enjoy the end product.

The problem for many Irish overseas property investors is how they purchased their property and the issues that are now affecting them at home.

The boom in the Irish overseas property sector investment market grew as a result of the increasing property prices in Ireland. The Irish banks were flush with cheap money from the ECB, but viewed saw overseas property as too risky, so they refused mortgages to give mortgages on foreign properties.

Instead they saw that Irish people had a lot of equity built up in their Irish properties, and preferred the investors to risk this equity by encouraging them to release that equity via equity release loans, which used the existing property to guarantee the equity that was released. This allowed owners of Irish property to add the cost of a foreign property on to the value of an existing Irish mortgage, which in many instances was the investor’s main home.

These loans were granted freely to Irish homeowners are much cheaper interest rates than could achieved in the country of choice. For instance in Bulgaria interest rates were 12-14% during the boom, whereas they were as low as 2% in Ireland.

This is has led to a double jeopardy for investors with their Irish properties and their foreign properties both reducing in value whilst some investors are effectively having to finance mortgages on two or more properties. There are many reasons why this is proving more difficult in the current market, reduced wages, higher interest rates and lower yields. With interest rates expected to rise in Ireland it is important for Irish investors to protect their credit rating in here because this could cause many more problems in the future, especially with restricted approval procedures in the banks.

With any investment an exit strategy is vital, when it comes to selling an overseas investment property an exit strategy means how you are going to sell the property and who you are going to sell it to. The problem is few investors have a realistic ‘exit strategy’ and there are few options out there. In some emerging markets, such as Bulgaria, there isn’t even an established second hand market in which to sell the property.

Without an exit strategy there is no way to recoup the return on your investment. Many people bought overseas property investments with little thought for their exit strategy i.e. how they were going to sell their property. With many people assuming that they would be able to either sell to another Irish investor or local property buyer. This is now rarely possible

The new market conditions mean that there are fewer options left to those investors wanting to sell their property, there are very few Irish and British buyers out there and the many local economies have taken as much of a hit as ours as. The remaining investors that are out there are often from countries to which Irish buyers have little or no existing links, such as Russia, which is part of what are called the ‘BRIC countries’ i.e. Brazil Russia India and China; these are the countries with economies that are estimated to grow the most over the next ten years.

Now Ireland is dead financially all the money men are turning their focus towards the BRIC countries. For most Europeans, Russia is the natural market to target, indeed the IMF has forecast that by 2013 Russia will be the second largest economy in Europe in terms of purchasing power.

The Russian economy is faring much better during the credit crunch than any other European country. With Russians continuing to holiday around Europe they are now some of the biggest buyers of overseas property and one of the largest customer bases that Irish owners of overseas property should be targeting if they want to sell their property.

Selling your overseas property investment

What do Russian buyers like?

  • Unlike the Irish who bought many properties off-plan, and often came to regret this decision, Russians do not buy off plan, they buy completed properties that they can have in their ownership in a few weeks. This lowers the risk of something going wrong and is a tactic that Irish investors could do well to heed in future overseas property deals.
  • Russians prefer seafront properties. These are the prime spots. If you don’t have a seafront property then good leisure facilities are a plus.
  • They also like properties that are a year old so that any initial problems have been resolved.
  • They like furnished properties, so if you property is not furnished you will get a better price if you can afford fit out price (finance for fit outs is now available in some countries).
  • If the property has not been used even better, but if it has, ensure it is looking as good as new by making sure anything that needs fixing or replacing is done.

Key tips for selling your investment

  • Make your property presentable and let your management company know you are looking to sell. Ensure that maintaining they are maintaining the communal areas. If you see anything that needs addressing then get on to them about it quickly.
  • Use a reputable English speaking agent with good knowledge and contacts in the Russian market. Ensure the sales contract is produced in both English.
  • Be realistic about the price you will get for your property and adjust your expectations for the current market conditions. Ensure you’re happy with your valuation before you put the property on the market. If you’re unsure compare your property with similar units on the market in the vicinity.
  • Gather your contracts and titles deeds and any other legal documents that you have. You will need these for the sale and having them ready will ensure your sale goes through quicker.
  • Be patient about the timeframe in which it will sell. In the current market it won’t happen overnight, but it can happen if the price is right as there are still buyers around.

We started developing commercial property investments Bulgaria at the turn of the century. A few years ago our contacts there asked us to help them source residential property for their Russian clients. The problem was simple, most of the new build property was owned by Irish and British investors, and to a lesser extent the Dutch and Scandinavians, but the Russian agents had no links to these investors. So they needed some way to bring the two sides together, which what we have done successfully for the past few years. Since the beginning of last year we have been helping Irish investors sell their properties to Russian investors, selling over 225 units.

The situation is very similar in many other parts of the world with huge amounts of property owned by Irish and British investors. As a result we recently expanded to include other Russian hotspots in Europe where Irish people bought en mass: Bulgaria, Spain, Portugal, and the Adriatic namely Croatia and Montenegro.

Different countries will have different demands. It may that where you bought the demand is coming from German, American or Arab investors. The key is establishing your exit strategy: who is you target market? How are you going to target them? And how much will pay you for your investment?

By Dylan Cullen, Appreciating Assets www.appreciatingasset.ie

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Sell-off lifeline offered to Irish owners of Bulgaria properties

Irish company Appreciating Assets specialises in alternative or niche investments. They are currently focusing on the Bulgarian market where they are assisting Irish property owners sell their investments to Russian buyers. They have sold over 200 properties this year – not bad in a recession.

The Christmas and New Year period is a particularly busy one in Bulgaria as it is the peak of the winter season, so it is important for Irish property owners to market their properties whilst visitors are plentiful.

Below is an article today’s Irish Independent featuring Appreciating Assets. Link and full article below

http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/selloff-lifeline-offered-to-irish-owners-of-bulgaria-properties-1975189.html

IRISH INDEPENDENT

Sell-off lifeline offered to Irish owners of Bulgaria properties

By Charlie Weston, Personal Finance Editor

15th December, 2009.

AN Irish company is offering to buy out financially distressed owners of properties in Bulgaria.

Thousands of Irish buyers are being forced to walk away from Bulgarian properties they bought during the boom because they cannot meet loan repayments.

Now Dublin-based Appreciating Assets is providing them with a lifeline by offering to match up sellers with Russian buyers from across the Bulgarian border.

This newspaper reported last month that stretched owners of Bulgarian properties are walking away from their investments because they cannot afford to meet repayments.

Many of these people re-mortgaged their homes in Ireland to put down deposits on properties abroad.

Now that the apartments are nearing completion and they are being asked to pay the full amount, they are unable to raise the funds.

Foreign property lawyer Tom McGrath said his firm was now inundated with queries from people in financial trouble.

Yesterday, Dylan Cullen of Appreciated Assets said Russian buyers were plentiful in the Bulgarian market and many of them were likely to visit the country over the Christmas period.

Mr Cullen said: “Russia has a very robust economy that has not slipped into recession, so Russians are still holidaying abroad and still very active in the Bulgarian property market.”

He said his company needs Irish property owners to send it details of their properties now so it can target Russian buyers while they are in Bulgaria over the holiday period.

It is estimated that between 50,000 and 100,000 Irish people bought properties in Bulgaria between 2000 and 2008. Property experts said many of these people had typically paid €120,000 for apartments that were worth €40,000.

With offices in Dublin and SofiaIrish-owned Appreciating Assets Ltd has sold 200 properties in Bulgaria since the beginning of the year.

A spokesman for the company said sale prices were down between 40pc and 50pc from the property price peak.

- Charlie Weston Personal Finance Editor

Irish Independent

Bulgarian Buy-Back Scheme Extended

There is good news today for Irish and British investors who are looking to sell a Bulgarian property, Irish investment company, Appreciating Assets Ltd, has extended its successful Bulgarian buy back scheme  to include Bulgaria’s famous ski resorts and also opened it up to British investors.

This is the first overseas property scheme of its type; it provides a long awaited exit strategy for struggling overseas investors. It aims to match sellers with buyers who are currently seeking to invest in the Bulgarian property market.

The scheme was first launched in Ireland at the turn of the year, initially just for properties on the Black Sea, since then the company has experienced a huge response from people wishing to sell their properties and has achieved a very high success rate in finding buyers. Following the success of this first stage it is now being launched in the Britain and expanded to include Bulgaria’s famous ski resorts. Appreciating Assets Ltd has investors registered as part of the buy back scheme who are currently looking to purchase properties in Bulgaria.

Dylan Cullen, Director, Appreciating Assets Ltd, said:

“In recent years British purchasers bought a huge amount of property in Bulgaria, mostly fuelled by the low prices on offer there. In the current economic climate it is proving difficult for many investors to sell their properties, but we have buyers available that are willing to purchase immediately. So we’re asking anyone with a property that they would like to sell to get in touch with us today.”

The buy-back scheme addresses the major flaw in the overseas property market in emerging countries, such as Bulgaria, where investors have great difficulty in selling on their properties due to the absence of an established second-hand resale market.This is mainly due to the high levels of new build properties and the fact that most people who are lucky enough to find a buyer for their property, then find that their prospective buyer cannot get finance. Appreciating Assets Ltd has solved this issue by only submitting properties to investors that have already shown that they are in the financial position to make the purchase.

Property investors from the UK can still benefit from the strength of the euro, which is still as high as €1 – 87p; recent rises have helped offset reductions in property prices, meaning losses by UK investors are currently much less compared to those investors based in eurozone countries, such as the Republic of Ireland. But the pound is expected to strengthen against the euro so property owners would be wise to take advantage whilst they can.

Property owners should call Appreciating Assets Ltd for further details on +353 (0)1 632 8632 or submit their property details on www.appreciatingassets.ie. A UK office is due to open shortly.

Notes to editors

Dublin based Appreciating Assets Ltd has was set up in 2006 to focus on alternative investments that have a unique angle compared to main opportunities in the market. The Directors have almost twenty years’ experience in the investment sector, they have funded and developed several successful projects in the South of France, Portugal, the Czech Republic and Bulgaria, with a focus on syndicated investments funds and commercial developments, as well as high end residential developments.

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