The Tel Aviv area light rail project is back on the rails again - with the state paying for it. Two weeks after cancelling the tender for the MTS franchisee, the government company in charge of the planned public transportation plan, NTA - Metropolitan Mass Transit System, issued a tender on Wednesday for planning the tunnels to be dug. The new budget for the project is NIS 10.7 billion and the new date for the completion of the first section, the Red Line, is scheduled for Dec. 31, 2017.
The new tender came after the finance and transportation ministries approved changing their plan for the tunnels. The new digging method will cut the time needed for the work and not require pumping out groundwater. But there are disadvantages too. The new method will require more work on the surface during construction, which will lead to more traffic jams and other disruptions - in particular within Tel Aviv.
The 23-kilometer Red Line from Bat Yam to Petah Tikva will be divided into three sections. Some 11 kilometers will be underground from Menashiya in south-west Tel Aviv via Jabotinsky Street to Ramat Gan and Bnei Brak, and on to the Geha junction. Out of the 33 planned stations, 23 will be underground, about a kilometer apart on average.
The official approval for funding the light rail project from the state budget will only come after the Sukkot holiday, and will require cabinet approval. The original tender was for a Buy, Operate and Transfer (BOT ) project financed by the tender winner, but MTS ran into financing problems as a result of the global financial crisis.
Wednesday's tender was only for the planning of three large shafts through which the tunnel boring machine would be introduced. The proposed method for tunneling is called "cut and cover," in which the tunneling digs up the surface as it proceeds and then is covered up. This is the method commonly used in Israel for most underground projects up to now. Part of the construction of the new Tel Aviv-Jerusalem high speed rail line is using this method. The tunneling machine will be lowered into the shafts and large underground spaces, through which both building materials and the material dug up will brought in and out.
MTS had proposed "deep mining," in which almost all the work takes place underground. However, due to Tel Aviv's high groundwater level, engineering professionals were worried that not all the possible problems were taken into account in the deep mining proposal.
Source Haaretz
All the news about White City Residence, upcoming skyscrapers in Tel Aviv and other related news...
Pages
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Friday, September 17, 2010
Israel's Economy Helps Boost Real Estate Prices To Double-Digit Gains
Low interest rates, a shortage in housing supply and heightened activity by property acquisition groups, helped housing prices in Israel record their fourth consecutive quarter of double digit growth in the first quarter of 2010. While much of the increase was attributed to strong economic growth and low interest rates, the country’s central bank in recent months has taken action to raise interest rates and tighten loan to value standards in the hopes of avoiding a property bubble.
After a 22% y-o-y price surge in Q4 2009, the average dwelling price in Israel rose 16% y-o-y during the first quarter of 2010, according to data from the Central Bureau of Statistics. It was the fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit annual house price increases.
The average price of owner-occupied dwellings in nine main residential areas was NIS 958,000 (US$248,371) in Q1 2010, up by 2% from the previous quarter. Prices in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem remain the highest at NIS 1.7 million (US$450,750) and NIS 1.33 million (US$352,640), respectively. The average prices were up by around 4% to 5% q-o-q in these two main metropolitan areas.
On the other hand, the district of Haifa in northern Israel, which shares a border with Hezbollah-controlled districts in southern Lebanon, has one of the cheapest housing in the country, with an average price of ILS 647,800 (US$172,269) in Q1 2010.
The strong house price increases were attributed to strong economic growth and low interest rates despite the global crisis in 2009 and early-2010. Positive developments including OECD’s invitation last May to join the exclusive rich man’s club added to the optimism of buyers and investors.
Fearing that a house price bubble has formed, the Bank of Israel (BOI):
“Prices have risen over 20 percent in the past year and if they continue to rise at this pace we will have a bubble,” said BOI governor Stanley Fisher.
Aside from the central bank’s actions, the recent conflict involving humanitarian ships going to the disputed Gaza strip has also affected house prices. Historically, house prices in Israel are significantly affected by conflicts and the security situation in the region. Prices are also typically depressed by the huge amount of construction in new settlements.
Read the rest of this very good research paper from Global Property Online there.
After a 22% y-o-y price surge in Q4 2009, the average dwelling price in Israel rose 16% y-o-y during the first quarter of 2010, according to data from the Central Bureau of Statistics. It was the fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit annual house price increases.
The average price of owner-occupied dwellings in nine main residential areas was NIS 958,000 (US$248,371) in Q1 2010, up by 2% from the previous quarter. Prices in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem remain the highest at NIS 1.7 million (US$450,750) and NIS 1.33 million (US$352,640), respectively. The average prices were up by around 4% to 5% q-o-q in these two main metropolitan areas.
On the other hand, the district of Haifa in northern Israel, which shares a border with Hezbollah-controlled districts in southern Lebanon, has one of the cheapest housing in the country, with an average price of ILS 647,800 (US$172,269) in Q1 2010.
The strong house price increases were attributed to strong economic growth and low interest rates despite the global crisis in 2009 and early-2010. Positive developments including OECD’s invitation last May to join the exclusive rich man’s club added to the optimism of buyers and investors.
Fearing that a house price bubble has formed, the Bank of Israel (BOI):
- Issued stricter mortgage lending rules in June 2010. The loan-to-value (LTV) ratio was reduced to 60% from 70%. Those banks wanting to give more than the allowed 60% LTV are required to set aside 0.75% of credit extended for doubtful loans.
- Raised the key interest rate by 25 basis points to 1.75% in August 2010
“Prices have risen over 20 percent in the past year and if they continue to rise at this pace we will have a bubble,” said BOI governor Stanley Fisher.
Aside from the central bank’s actions, the recent conflict involving humanitarian ships going to the disputed Gaza strip has also affected house prices. Historically, house prices in Israel are significantly affected by conflicts and the security situation in the region. Prices are also typically depressed by the huge amount of construction in new settlements.
Read the rest of this very good research paper from Global Property Online there.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Are the French invading Neve Tzedek?
Three French residents have acquired five apartments for a total of NIS 22 million last month in the White City Residence project (Neve Tzedek by the Sea).
Are foreign residents returning to the Israeli real estate market? It looks like it. One buyer bought two flats on the 7th floor totalling 200 sqm for NIS 8.5 million (making the price per sqm at NIS 42.5k or USD 11.3K). Another buyer purchased a similar surface on the 11th floor for NIS 9 million translating into a price per sqm of NIS 45k or USD 12K. And on that same floor a 100 sqm flat was sold for NIS 4.7 million reflecting a price per sqm of NIS 47k or USD 12.5k. All apartments include a balcony overlooking the sea, a storage room and an underground parking.
The project, whose construction began last year, is located along Isaac Elhanan and is owned by Eurocom Real Estate, Hammerman and a group of investors from Belgium. It includes 160 apartments on 40 floors. The project has sold 71 flats so far for a value of more than NIS 300 million. Buyers are mostly business people from Israel, Switzerland, Venezuela, France and England.
The company said that they had now completed the excavation work and that they were now working on building the underground parking lot. Ran Ben-Avraham, vice president of marketing at Hammerman said: "As every summer, we saw increased interest from foreign residents for our project. What is surprising this year is that the decision process was so quick and that transactions were carried out in such a short timeframe. It seems that Europeans have identified White City Residence as an attractive destination in Tel Aviv and are bringing one another to the table".
For a live Webcam of the construction site, just click here.
Are foreign residents returning to the Israeli real estate market? It looks like it. One buyer bought two flats on the 7th floor totalling 200 sqm for NIS 8.5 million (making the price per sqm at NIS 42.5k or USD 11.3K). Another buyer purchased a similar surface on the 11th floor for NIS 9 million translating into a price per sqm of NIS 45k or USD 12K. And on that same floor a 100 sqm flat was sold for NIS 4.7 million reflecting a price per sqm of NIS 47k or USD 12.5k. All apartments include a balcony overlooking the sea, a storage room and an underground parking.
The project, whose construction began last year, is located along Isaac Elhanan and is owned by Eurocom Real Estate, Hammerman and a group of investors from Belgium. It includes 160 apartments on 40 floors. The project has sold 71 flats so far for a value of more than NIS 300 million. Buyers are mostly business people from Israel, Switzerland, Venezuela, France and England.
The company said that they had now completed the excavation work and that they were now working on building the underground parking lot. Ran Ben-Avraham, vice president of marketing at Hammerman said: "As every summer, we saw increased interest from foreign residents for our project. What is surprising this year is that the decision process was so quick and that transactions were carried out in such a short timeframe. It seems that Europeans have identified White City Residence as an attractive destination in Tel Aviv and are bringing one another to the table".
For a live Webcam of the construction site, just click here.
Monday, September 6, 2010
Committee sets height limits for Neve Tzedek
A sub-committee of the Tel Aviv district planning and building committee ruled to restrict construction in 54 dunams (13.5 acres) at the southern end of the historic Neve Tzedek neighbourhood to two-story buildings.
After years of stalemate during which all construction plans for the area were put on hold, the subcommittee approved a plan that includes preserving building facades. It also allows for development of hotels and residential and commercial construction. The move comes in the wake of controversy created by the 38-story Neve Tzedek tower on the southern end of the neighbourhood.
Several other towers are planned on the neighborhood's periphery. The subcommittee gave the green light to some three-story structures on the edges of the tract. Deputy Mayor Pe'er Visner said the plan would be appealed for being too restrictive, while the neighborhood committee in the area said the plan would still damage the neighborhood's character.
Source Haaretz
After years of stalemate during which all construction plans for the area were put on hold, the subcommittee approved a plan that includes preserving building facades. It also allows for development of hotels and residential and commercial construction. The move comes in the wake of controversy created by the 38-story Neve Tzedek tower on the southern end of the neighbourhood.
Several other towers are planned on the neighborhood's periphery. The subcommittee gave the green light to some three-story structures on the edges of the tract. Deputy Mayor Pe'er Visner said the plan would be appealed for being too restrictive, while the neighborhood committee in the area said the plan would still damage the neighborhood's character.
Source Haaretz
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Why does a tiny Tel Aviv flat cost more than a US house?
Israeli housing prices have risen drastically in recent years. No argument there. But there's plenty of arguing over whether we're talking about a bubble. That is, is the increase driven by speculation, with buyers willing to pay sky-high prices because they believe the prices will continue to rise further? Or are there solid economic reasons for the upward price spiral, such as demand outstripping supply coupled with low interest rates?
Since there are good arguments to be made for both sides, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle, with both speculative and genuine economic factors contributing to push up prices. A typical Tel Aviv apartment block. The price of income-generating properties rises as long-term interest rates drop.
The following example, based on a real apartment, supports the economic explanation, not the speculative one. For the sake of convenience I have rounded out the numbers.
Five years ago, in the summer of 2005, an investor bought an apartment for rental purposes: a small studio apartment in a new building but in an unattractive, congested area of south Tel Aviv. He paid NIS 430,000, using his own savings rather than taking a mortgage. At the time he could expect to rent it out for from NIS 2,400 to NIS 2,500 a month. Rental income of NIS 30,000 rent a year on an investment of NIS 430,000 translates into returns of about 6.5% a year. Israeli government fixed-income Shahar bonds would have yielded roughly the same return, in nominal terms.
Investing in property isn't like investing in government bonds. Like every instrument of investment, it has both benefits and drawbacks. On the minus side are the headaches of being a landlord, the risk of getting stuck with a bad tenant and occasional expenses. Unlike nominal bonds, however, rents and home prices tend to keep pace with inflation, and up to a certain threshold rental income is not taxable. Capital gains from bonds are taxed. In any event our man went for the property, not the bonds.
Five years later, where are we? The monthly rent rose to NIS 3,000 a month, representing an annual increase of around 4.5%, or between 20% and 25% over the five-year period. That wasn't a meteoric pace, it was roughly the same as inflation. But the purchase price is another story altogether. Similar apartments sell for NIS 800,000 today, meaning it rose by by 80% in five years, far outstripping the increase in rent.
In 2005 the return on investment was the same as nominal government bonds. Now the equation is NIS 800,000 (apartment value ) divided by NIS 36,000 a year (rental income ), which works out to 4.5% - the same as the return on Shahar bonds. In other words, that didn't change in the five years. That, dear reader, obeys the laws of economics and financing. When long-term interest rates drop, the price of income-generating properties rises. The longer the lifetime of the assets, the more their prices increase. Those are the laws of mathematics. Since property has a long lifetime, its price rises significantly when long-term interest rates drop.
Tel Aviv up, Florida down
But that isn't the end of our story. Let us travel abroad. That modest apartment in Tel Aviv cost $100,000 in dollar terms back in 2005. Back then, a single-family home in a good neighborhood in Florida cost around $400,000. Since then the dollar has weakened against the shekel and U.S. property prices have spiraled down. The dollar price of the Tel Aviv apartment more than doubled, to $210,000, while the price of the Florida house shrank by 50%, to $200,000. And that means that for the money you could get for that tiny studio apartment in an undesirable south Tel Aviv neighborhood, you could buy a pretty house in a Florida suburb, lawn and plastic flamingos included.
Does that make sense? At first glance it seems absurd, but it isn't. That Tel Aviv apartment can be easily rented out for an annual return of 4.5%, while that Florida house could well stand empty for a long time, racking up maintenance costs and creating a negative cash flow. That's because thousands of unneeded homes that stand empty today were built during Florida's extreme housing bubble, while nothing of that sort happened in Tel Aviv.
Strange as it may sound, the main reason for the sharp increase in the price of housing in Tel Aviv is the implosion of the real-estate bubble in the United States. Why? Simple. That implosion caused a financial crisis that led to interest rates falling through the floor. After the U.S. Federal Reserve in the bond market, yields on U.S. Treasury bills also fell hard. In 2005, yields on 10-year T-bills were running at 4.5%. Yields on Israeli government bonds were at around 6.5%. Today, the U.S. bills are trading at yields of 2.7% and Israeli bonds at 4.5%. The gap has held steady, but it is the drop in yields from 6.5% to 4.5% in Israel that caused housing prices here to mushroom, as described.
Claim that there is a real estate bubble in Israel is thus tantamount to saying that there is a bubble in T-bills, as they are what underlie housing prices in Israel.
The cost of protecting the financial system
Thus the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has done everything in its power to protect the financial system by shoring up financial asset prices (not very well, it must be said ), has been inflating housing prices in Israel. In cases like this, where asset prices mushroom - with all the problems that implies - people usually attack the central bank, asking what it means to do about it. The answer can only be to raise interest rates, to dampen the speculative urge and lower asset prices.
Say that tomorrow yields on 10-year T-bills were to be in the range of 4%-4.5%, placing yields on Shahars at 6%. Then the price of our studio apartment would drop significantly. At a yield of 6%, its price should be around NIS 600,000, 25% less than today. But the Bank of Israel's hands are tied. It can't raise interest rates as it pleases just to tame housing prices. Since U.S. interest rates are so low, a substantial hike to interest rates in Israel, causing long-term bond yields to jump to 6%, would cause the shekel to strengthen more and more. The implications for industry and exports would be horrendous and the upshot could be serious recession.
Thus the decision-makers face a dilemma: Should they raise interest rates and prevent a real estate bubble, despite all the other problems it could create such as savaging Israeli exports and jobs? Or should they keep interest rates low, stimulating the economy and risking the creation of a property bubble? It is a tough one, and there are no elegant solutions. In the United States, by the way, five years ago and today too the answer was clear: Avert a slowdown at any cost. That is why interest rates are kept low and Washington is building up tremendous budget deficits, despite the risks.
This story of one south Tel Aviv apartment is just that - one story, insignificant on its own. But it demonstrates beautifully just how distorted economies worldwide have become while also highlighting the dilemmas faced by policy makers everywhere, as a result of developments in the United States rather than in their own countries. It also demonstrates beautifully just how little room for maneuver our leaders have.
Source Haaretz
Since there are good arguments to be made for both sides, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle, with both speculative and genuine economic factors contributing to push up prices. A typical Tel Aviv apartment block. The price of income-generating properties rises as long-term interest rates drop.
The following example, based on a real apartment, supports the economic explanation, not the speculative one. For the sake of convenience I have rounded out the numbers.
Five years ago, in the summer of 2005, an investor bought an apartment for rental purposes: a small studio apartment in a new building but in an unattractive, congested area of south Tel Aviv. He paid NIS 430,000, using his own savings rather than taking a mortgage. At the time he could expect to rent it out for from NIS 2,400 to NIS 2,500 a month. Rental income of NIS 30,000 rent a year on an investment of NIS 430,000 translates into returns of about 6.5% a year. Israeli government fixed-income Shahar bonds would have yielded roughly the same return, in nominal terms.
Investing in property isn't like investing in government bonds. Like every instrument of investment, it has both benefits and drawbacks. On the minus side are the headaches of being a landlord, the risk of getting stuck with a bad tenant and occasional expenses. Unlike nominal bonds, however, rents and home prices tend to keep pace with inflation, and up to a certain threshold rental income is not taxable. Capital gains from bonds are taxed. In any event our man went for the property, not the bonds.
Five years later, where are we? The monthly rent rose to NIS 3,000 a month, representing an annual increase of around 4.5%, or between 20% and 25% over the five-year period. That wasn't a meteoric pace, it was roughly the same as inflation. But the purchase price is another story altogether. Similar apartments sell for NIS 800,000 today, meaning it rose by by 80% in five years, far outstripping the increase in rent.
In 2005 the return on investment was the same as nominal government bonds. Now the equation is NIS 800,000 (apartment value ) divided by NIS 36,000 a year (rental income ), which works out to 4.5% - the same as the return on Shahar bonds. In other words, that didn't change in the five years. That, dear reader, obeys the laws of economics and financing. When long-term interest rates drop, the price of income-generating properties rises. The longer the lifetime of the assets, the more their prices increase. Those are the laws of mathematics. Since property has a long lifetime, its price rises significantly when long-term interest rates drop.
Tel Aviv up, Florida down
But that isn't the end of our story. Let us travel abroad. That modest apartment in Tel Aviv cost $100,000 in dollar terms back in 2005. Back then, a single-family home in a good neighborhood in Florida cost around $400,000. Since then the dollar has weakened against the shekel and U.S. property prices have spiraled down. The dollar price of the Tel Aviv apartment more than doubled, to $210,000, while the price of the Florida house shrank by 50%, to $200,000. And that means that for the money you could get for that tiny studio apartment in an undesirable south Tel Aviv neighborhood, you could buy a pretty house in a Florida suburb, lawn and plastic flamingos included.
Does that make sense? At first glance it seems absurd, but it isn't. That Tel Aviv apartment can be easily rented out for an annual return of 4.5%, while that Florida house could well stand empty for a long time, racking up maintenance costs and creating a negative cash flow. That's because thousands of unneeded homes that stand empty today were built during Florida's extreme housing bubble, while nothing of that sort happened in Tel Aviv.
Strange as it may sound, the main reason for the sharp increase in the price of housing in Tel Aviv is the implosion of the real-estate bubble in the United States. Why? Simple. That implosion caused a financial crisis that led to interest rates falling through the floor. After the U.S. Federal Reserve in the bond market, yields on U.S. Treasury bills also fell hard. In 2005, yields on 10-year T-bills were running at 4.5%. Yields on Israeli government bonds were at around 6.5%. Today, the U.S. bills are trading at yields of 2.7% and Israeli bonds at 4.5%. The gap has held steady, but it is the drop in yields from 6.5% to 4.5% in Israel that caused housing prices here to mushroom, as described.
Claim that there is a real estate bubble in Israel is thus tantamount to saying that there is a bubble in T-bills, as they are what underlie housing prices in Israel.
The cost of protecting the financial system
Thus the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has done everything in its power to protect the financial system by shoring up financial asset prices (not very well, it must be said ), has been inflating housing prices in Israel. In cases like this, where asset prices mushroom - with all the problems that implies - people usually attack the central bank, asking what it means to do about it. The answer can only be to raise interest rates, to dampen the speculative urge and lower asset prices.
Say that tomorrow yields on 10-year T-bills were to be in the range of 4%-4.5%, placing yields on Shahars at 6%. Then the price of our studio apartment would drop significantly. At a yield of 6%, its price should be around NIS 600,000, 25% less than today. But the Bank of Israel's hands are tied. It can't raise interest rates as it pleases just to tame housing prices. Since U.S. interest rates are so low, a substantial hike to interest rates in Israel, causing long-term bond yields to jump to 6%, would cause the shekel to strengthen more and more. The implications for industry and exports would be horrendous and the upshot could be serious recession.
Thus the decision-makers face a dilemma: Should they raise interest rates and prevent a real estate bubble, despite all the other problems it could create such as savaging Israeli exports and jobs? Or should they keep interest rates low, stimulating the economy and risking the creation of a property bubble? It is a tough one, and there are no elegant solutions. In the United States, by the way, five years ago and today too the answer was clear: Avert a slowdown at any cost. That is why interest rates are kept low and Washington is building up tremendous budget deficits, despite the risks.
This story of one south Tel Aviv apartment is just that - one story, insignificant on its own. But it demonstrates beautifully just how distorted economies worldwide have become while also highlighting the dilemmas faced by policy makers everywhere, as a result of developments in the United States rather than in their own countries. It also demonstrates beautifully just how little room for maneuver our leaders have.
Source Haaretz
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)





