Montag, 28. Juli 2008

Oil rich Russian tycoons carve out German business empires

Berlin - Buoyed by fast-paced economic growth and high commodity prices, Russia's new oil rich tycoons have stepped up a push to establish a foothold in Germany amid a boom in business ties between the two nations.

Indeed, apart from building stakes in a range of German industries from cosmetics, through to fashion, tourism, construction, energy, the media and shipbuilding, Russian entrepreneurs have also begun a drive into real estate surrounding Berlin turning dilapidated former grand Prussian estates into luxury villas and five-star hotels.

Moreover, the pace of Russian investment into Europe's biggest economy appears to be picking up.

Alexei Mordashov, head of Russia's biggest steelmaker last week said he was boosting his stake in TUI, Europe's leading travel group, while Russian Railways draws up plans to buy a stake in Germany's rail company Deutsche Bahn AG, due for privatization this year.

The size of the German market makes it attractive to investors such as those from Russia, with Germany also acting as 'a gateway to other European Union states,' said Oliver Wieck, who heads up the east committee of the Federation of German Industry.

'Russian investors can invest in areas, which are not available to them in Russia,' he said.
Meanwhile, evidence continues to emerge that the Russian business offensive into Germany is gaining ground.

Russian billionaire Suleyman Kerimov, a key stakeholder in Russian energy giant Gazprom, has been reported to be considering boosting his holding in Germany's biggest bank, Deutsche Bank.
At the same time, KGB officer-turned businessman Alexander Lebedev has been weighing taking a 76-per-cent stake in another leading German travel company, Ozer Tours.

The sudden appearance of some of Russia's richest business barons on the share registrars of leading German companies also represents the latest stage in the development of the two nations' new economic ties, which began to take shape following the implosion of communism across Eastern Europe almost two decades ago.

After Germany ploughed vast funds into Moscow in the early days following the end of communism to help provide for Russian troops returning from what was once the Soviet empire, German industry began moving into Russia in the hope of the dawning of a new business age in the country.

This appears to have paid off with Germany now Russia's number one trading partner and a total of 4,500 German companies including giants such as Siemens, Bosch and BASF having set up shop in Russia to form a key part of the economic ties between the two countries.

In particular, Russia's booming car market has begun drawing in fresh investment from key German auto makers with Daimler weighing buying into a Russian truck company and both BMW and Volkswagen moving to boost sales in Russia.

German exports to Russia raced ahead by 25.4 per cent during the first quarter to help meet Russia's pent up demand for infrastructure development with Russia in a sense recycling oil money back into the world economy.

Despite the fragile global economic story that has taken shape this year, Germany and Russia continue to clock up solid economic performances with the two countries building a joint pipeline for future deliveries under the Baltic Sea.

Plans are underway in Moscow for the creation of a sovereign wealth fund capable of large-scale private equity investment. But for the moment the Russian oligarchs are in a sense filling the role that could be played by a major sovereign wealth fund.

While Russian investment has up until recently tended to focus on nations that once formed part of Moscow's Soviet empire, Deutsche Bank believes Russia is now the second biggest source of overseas direct investment in emerging economies.

To be sure, with Russian industry flushed with money, investment from the nation has been branching out into the world and as a result diversifying away from the oil, gas and metal sectors into other industries.

This is also a sign of the increasing role that German infrastructure and engineering know-how plays in the strategic moves by Russian entrepreneurs.

But in addition it reflects the aim of corporate Russia to Go West by opening up new markets, boosting profits and building new avenues of financing while securing raw materials and meeting their global ambitions.

Apart from investments in fashion house Escada and fertilizer materials, Russian conglomerate AFK Sistemam has been weighing up forging stakes in chipmaker Infineon AG and Deutsche Telekom AG, Europe's biggest telecoms company.

While Russian billionaire 40-year-old Oleg Deripaska has now built up about a 10-per-cent stake in Germany's biggest construction company Hochtief AG, Russian energy giant Gazprom owns a big chunk of German gas group Wingas.

By Andrew McCathie Jul 28, 2008, 14:28 GMT

quelle: http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/business/news/article_1419895.php/Oil_rich_Russian_tycoons_carve_out_German_business_empires__Feature_

Sonntag, 27. Juli 2008

Berlin property goes upscale

BERLIN: A new luxury residence going up in the heart of east Berlin promises airy lofts, a swimming pool, spa and a concierge service -- the kind of luxury you would expect to find in London or New York.

The "Fehrbelliner" complex is one of a growing number of high-end developments sprouting up in the German capital, injecting new life into a long-suffering real estate market better known for its graffiti-covered squats and prefab Soviet-style cement constructions.

Boasting exotic names like "Fellini" and "Oxford", the new developments offer apartments with price tags approaching 10,000 euros (7, 880 pounds) per square-metre, more than double the cost of the city's top offerings just a couple of years ago.

They amount to a high-stakes bet that Berlin, which disappointed so many investors after the fall of the Wall, is finally blossoming into a political and cultural hub capable of luring the affluent from other parts of Germany and abroad.

"The whole concept of luxury living in Berlin is new," said Roman Heidrich, leader of a new Berlin-based residential property team at Jones Lang LaSalle that was established earlier this year in response to the emerging market.

"All of a sudden we are seeing a large number of high-end projects being built or in the pipeline. It remains to be seen whether they will all find buyers."

While property markets in European capitals like Madrid, London and Paris boomed in recent years only to cool off in the face of a credit crunch spawned by the U.S. subprime crisis, Berlin has confounded investors for nearly two decades by defying broader market trends.

Prices have remained stubbornly low, weighed down by the lowest home ownership rates in all of Germany, a lack of industry, high unemployment and a post-Wall sprawl that has upset the balance between supply and demand.

According to figures compiled by Deutsche Bank analyst Tobias Just, the average price of a flat in Berlin at the end of 2007 was 2,620 euros per square metre, compared to 3,700 euros in Munich, 4,780 in London and 5,352 in Paris.

While Paris, London and Madrid have enjoyed double-digit growth in prices over the past five years, Just puts the rise in Berlin at a paltry 0.2 percent.

Now this may be changing -- at least in Mitte and Prenzlauer Berg, trendy districts in the former east whose leafy streets lined with art galleries, restaurants and cafes are Berlin's answer to New York's West Village and London's Notting Hill.

FOREIGN BUYERS

At the southern edge of Mitte, between the German foreign ministry and the picturesque Gendarmenmarkt square, a new neighbourhood of shiny townhouses and luxury apartments has risen up over the past year.

Maik Uwe Hinkel, a veteran Berlin property developer, says he could have sold each of the 17 flats in the gleaming "Oxford Residence" there three or four times over.

"This area is very much in demand. We have Spanish, Italian, Polish and French buyers as well as Germans," he said.

But even he is cautious about the huge number of luxury properties hitting the market at once -- about 30 new developments in the Mitte area alone by his estimation.

Perhaps the biggest project of all is the ambitious "Tacheles Quarter", a massive residential and commercial complex totalling 80,000 square metres that the Fundus Group, builders of Berlin's Adlon Hotel, aim to begin next year.

Smack dab in the heart of Mitte, next to a symbol of Berlin's early post-Wall era -- the crumbling Tacheles art centre -- the development will boast a "Flatiron" building to rival the one on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue and a main residence meant to echo the iconic Dakota on New York's Central Park West.

"Every project has an element of speculation to it. In the end you have to go with your gut feeling," said Thomas Schingnitz, who is overseeing the planning of the venture.

"We have seen how the Mitte area has developed over the past two years. We think the demand is there. We are convinced this project will work."

WARNING SIGNS

Signs are already emerging, however, that Berlin's shift upmarket will be less than smooth and that the city may struggle to remain immune to market forces sweeping other European capitals.
Building of the Fehrbelliner complex, a brainchild of the Orco Property Group, whose glittery sale launch was timed to coincide with the 2007 Berlin Film Festival, ground to a halt in April as swelling costs forced Orco to seek out a new builder.

Andreas Steinbauer, head of sales at Orco Germany, remains confident he will find buyers for the property's 9,000-euro per square-metre glass penthouses, with their unrivalled views of the Reichstag and television tower on Alexanderplatz.

But he concedes that the rising cost of raw materials, tighter credit conditions and competition from other new projects in Berlin have combined to cloud the project at the northern edge of Mitte.

"Our idea was to build at the very top end of the market," said Steinbauer, who hopes construction will resume soon and the complex of 160 luxury apartments, boasting a "wellness" area and child-minding services, will be completed by the spring of 2010.

"But there is a problem when so many new projects come at once. In other German cities like Munich you can build a luxury building and you know what you're getting into. In Berlin there is uncertainty, a certain amount of risk involved."

By Noah Barkin Reuters
Published: July 27, 2008
(Additional reporting by Dave Graham; editing by Rory Channing)

source: http://www.iht.com/articles/reuters/2008/07/27/europe/OUKWD-UK-BERLIN-PROPERTY.php?page=2

Mittwoch, 23. Juli 2008

BERLIN IM IMBRUCH: Im Zentrum der Stadt wird Wohnraum knapp und teuer

Für viele Berliner sind die Mieten in den zentralen Bezirken inzwischen zu hoch. Immer mehr Menschen ziehen deshalb weg. Um die City bildet sich ein Ring der Armut.

In der Greifswalder Straße in Prenzlauer Berg entsteht ein neues Quartier. Es ist etwas Besonderes für eine ausgewählte Klientel: „Townhouses“, werden diese weißen Häuser neudeutsch genannt, weil die Idee aus Großbritannien stammt, wo klinkerrote Reihenhäuser eine Idylle vortäuschen, die in den meisten Großstädten für die meisten Menschen für immer verloren ist.

Auch in Berlin kann sich nur eine Minderheit das eigene Heim mitten in der Stadt leisten: 550000 Euro kosten die 185 Quadratmeter großen Häuser im Winsviertel – das entspricht einer Miete von über 2300 Euro.

Ohne Nebenkosten.

Berlin schwelgt im Luxus.

Das junge, dynamische, das neue Berlin.

Aber nur ein kleiner Teil davon. Bei der Mehrheit der Bevölkerung geht die Angst um: Wie lange wird man sich die Mieten in der Stadt noch leisten können? Diese Frage stellt sich nicht nur die große Schar gut qualifizierter Akademiker, die sich ohne feste Anstellung von Projekt zu Projekt hangelt, sondern auch die wachsende Zahl der „geringfügig Beschäftigten“, in Fortbildung oder Ein-Euro-Jobs geparkte Arbeitsuchende.

Die Antwort ist ernüchternd:

Günstiger Wohnraum ist knapp und wird sehr bald richtig selten.

Prenzlauer Berg hat es gezeigt: Fast die komplette Bevölkerung wurde so schnell „ausgetauscht“ wie die Bausubstanz saniert. Das ist der Anfang einer Verdrängung, der nun die benachbarten schicken Viertel ergreift. Von Mitte, Friedrichshain, Kreuzberg, aber auch von Zentrumslagen im Berliner Westen. Vor dieser „fortgesetzten Verdrängung der gewachsenen Bewohnerstruktur“ und der „zunehmenden Knappheit bei preisgünstigen Mietwohnungen“, warnen heute sogar konservative Beobachter des Marktes wie die landeseigene Investitionsbank. Die Entwicklung ist alarmierend.

Und das sind die Ursachen: Die durchschnittlichen Einkommen in Berlin stiegen in den letzten zehn Jahren kaum (plus 4,5 Prozent). Dagegen verteuerten sich Milch, Benzin und Strom sprunghaft – kurz: der Lebensunterhalt. Deshalb bleibt den Berlinern immer weniger Geld in der Tasche. Rein rechnerisch ist das Haushaltseinkommen heute 15 Prozent geringer als vor zehn Jahren.

Von diesem geschrumpften Einkommen müssen Mieten bezahlt werden, die seither im Durchschnitt um rund 20 Prozent stiegen. Hinzu kommen höhere Preise für „Nebenkosten“, die um rund zehn Prozent stiegen. So bleibt den Berlinern immer weniger Geld zum Leben. Besonders schnell steigen die Preise kleiner Wohnungen. Denn immer mehr Menschen leben allein, über die Hälfte aller Haushalte sind es heute: mehr als eine Million. Oft sind es ältere Menschen, die Zahl der 65- bis 80-jährigen stieg in Berlin in den vergangenen zehn Jahren um mehr als 42 Prozent.

Aber auch Studenten und Auszubildende leben häufig allein, und die Zahl der 20- bis 30-Jährigen stieg in Berlin um fünf Prozent seit 1997. Weil immer mehr Menschen alleine leben, gibt es immer mehr Haushalte: Sieben Prozent mehr als vor zehn Jahren sind es heute. Da seither aber nicht viele neue Häuser entstanden, konkurrieren immer mehr Menschen um freie Wohnungen. Deshalb steigen die Mieten.

Die vielen Singles trifft es hart. Sie müssen im Durchschnitt ein Drittel ihres Einkommens für das Wohnen ausgeben – billiger wohnt, wer nicht allein lebt: Da sind es im Durchschnitt nur 27 Prozent. Wer gut wohnen will, muss in Berlin viel bezahlen. Für Wohnungen im östlichen Friedrichshain nahe dem Boxhagener Platz werden Mieten verlangt, die bis zu vierzig Prozent des durchschnittlichen Einkommens der Bewohner in dieser Gegend verschlingen.

Das hat Folgen: Wer früher dort lebte, Studenten und Selbstständige mit kleineren Einkommen, wird verdrängt, weil sich nur noch Besserverdienende den Kiez leisten können. Überraschend ist, dass die „Gentrifizierung“, wie die Verdrängung von Bewohnern in sanierten Quartieren genannt wird, auch den Norden Tempelhofs erfasst. Auch dort werden Mieten verlangt, die sehr hoch sind gemessen an den durchschnittlichen Einkommen in dieser Gegend: am Priesterweg, in der Fliegersiedlung sowie nördlich der Ullsteinstraße.

Bis zu 40 Prozent ihres Einkommens müssten auch die jetzigen Bewohner des Kreuzberger Graefekiezes für dort angebotene Wohnungen bezahlen.Besonders weit öffnet sich die Schere zwischen Mieten und Einkommen in Kreuzberg und Friedrichshain. Dort liegen die Haushaltseinkommen unter 90 Prozent des Berliner Durchschnitts – die geforderten Mieten liegen dagegen deutlich über dem Mittelwert. Nehmen wenigstens die 100000 leer stehenden Wohnungen etwas Druck von Markt und Mieten? Nein, meinen Experten wie der Ökonom Arnt von Bodelschwingh. Denn darunter seien Wohnungen in Erdgeschossen, in baufälligen Häusern, in sozialen Brennpunkten oder am Rand der Stadt, die sich überhaupt nicht vermieten ließen.

Guter und bezahlbarer Wohnraum ist knapp in Berlin.

(Erschienen im gedruckten Tagesspiegel vom 23.07.2008)

quelle: http://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/Wohnraum;art270,2577714

Montag, 21. Juli 2008

Appartamenti in palazzo storico a Friedrichshain a partire da 2.192EUR/mq

Berlino é ormai diventata una delle capitali piu interessanti e visitate del mondo. Scordatevi di Parigi, Londra o New york, Berlino é ormai la capitale che attrae piu visitatori. E una citta internazionale, aperta ad ogni tipo di cultura, ed é accogliente ed aperta. Come città offre tantissimo, con il suo ottimo trasporto publico é un piacere muoversi per la città a tutte le ore. Tenendo conto del basso tasso di criminalità , ci si sente sempre molto sicuri. Sia per un investimento o per comprare un´ appartamento per uso proprio, Berino é la città perfetta. Potete contattarci tramite il nostro sito o venire direttamente al nostro ufficio in Berlin Mitte, vicino al Hackescher Markt.


Berlino: Berlino é la citta con piú potenziale in tutto il mondo per investire. Berlino non é piu isolata dal resto della germania, ormai é la cittá piú visitata e facile da raggiungere con i tanti voli che la collegano. Il numero di turisti é sempre in aumento. É una città unica che offre tutti tipi di intrattenimento serali, locali e vita notturna. Svagi culturali e tante possibilitá per rilassarsi e svolgere una vita senza stress. Berlino puo vantarsi dei suoi edifici di grande importanza architettonica come i tipici edifici berlinesi rinnovati di fine secolo, i suoi tanti lagi che circondano la città e i molti parchi che fanno sembrare la citta un inmensa oasi verde. La qualità della vita é unica, la vita é rilassata, i prezzi bassi e non ci si annoia mai con le infinite opprtunità di intrattenimento. Tutti i tipi di soggiorno, sia vacanza, lavoro o il semplice vivere sono un´ esperienza veramente indimenticabile.

Mittwoch, 16. Juli 2008

Parken auf dem Balkon in Berlin


Wenn das kein Luxus ist: Das Berliner Unternehmen Carloft baut Wohnhäuser mit Autohebebühne. So kann jeder sein Fahrzeug direkt vor der Haustür abstellen. In Berlin steht das erste Gebäude dieser Art kurz vor der Fertigstellung, jetzt ist ein weiterer Bau auch für Düsseldorf geplant.

foto: ddp

Standort wird der Medienhafen sein; wo genau, darüber schweigen sich Carloft und die involvierten Projektentwickler aber noch aus. Noch liegt kein Bauantrag vor. Lange soll es aber nicht mehr dauern, dann werden auch in Düsseldorf 150 bis 250 Quadratmeter große Lofts mit Parkplatz vor der Tür entstehen.


Der Luxus hat hat allerdings seinen Preis: 450.600 Euro kosten die günstigsten Lofts; das Penthouse kostet gar 1,6 Millionen Euro. Auf 510 Quadratmeter kann man dafür auch eine Großfamilie bequem unterbringen. Zielgruppe sind Autoliebhaber, aber auch Familien oder Behinderte: Durch den Aufzug sind die Wohnungen garantiert barrierefrei.



Wenn das Auto gerade nicht vor der Tür steht, kann die Loggia als Terasse oder als Spielplatz genutzt werden.



Dienstag, 15. Juli 2008

In Berlin boomen Luxus-Immobilien

Ausgerechnet im armen Berlin entsteht ein Luxusbauprojekt nach dem anderen. Zum Service gehören Parkplätze in der Wohnung, hauseigene Wellness-Bereiche und Doormänner. Wer sich das leisten kann? Unter anderem reiche Menschen aus Los Angeles und London.

Neuer Luxus wohin man schaut – zum Beispiel in Berlin Zehlendorf. Hier entstehen die "Wannseegärten", ein neues Villenviertel mit 165 Wohneinheiten auf dem 80.000 Quadratmeter großen Gelände des ehemaligen Don-Bosco-Heims. Zwischen Wald und Wasser werden die neuen Zehlendorfer ab Ende des Jahres residieren.

Im ersten Bauabschnitt werden sechs Doppelhaushälften und zehn Landvillen errichtet, dann folgen weitere Einfamilien-, Reihen- und Hofhäuser – verteilt auf exklusive Quartiere entlang der Lindenallee. Das Immobilienunternehmen apellas investiert rund 60 Millionen Euro, die Haustypen hat der Architekt Götz M. Keller von MK Architekten entworfen.

Das Villenviertel wird ein modernes Pendant zur prachtvollen "Colonie Alsen" am Wannsee, die der Bankier Wilhelm Conrad 1863 gründete. Repräsentative Villen, kleine Schlösschen und weitläufige Gartenanlagen boten hier schon damals den Rahmen für das Leben des Großbürgertums.

Angesichts der aktuellen Einkommensdaten für die Hauptstadt überrascht die Vorliebe der Investoren für den Bau von Edelimmobilien. Schließlich hat das Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg in seinen jetzt vorgelegten Zahlen ausgewiesen, dass die Bruttolöhne der Berliner seit 2000 nur um 4,2 Prozent zugelegt haben, während die Verbraucherpreise im gleichen Zeitraum um 10,7 Prozent gestiegen sind. So betrachtet, sind die Berliner in den vergangenen Jahren also ärmer geworden. Wozu also Luxuswohnungen?

Menschen aus London und Los Angeles zieht es nach Berlin

Die edle Eigentumswohnungen werden wohl ihre Abnehmer finden. Denn dieses Angebot richtet sich nicht allein an Berliner Käufer, sondern ist auf eine internationale Klientel zugeschnitten. Nach Berechnungen des Verbandes Berlin-Brandenburgischer Wohnungsunternehmen (BBU) hatte ein Viertel der Käufer im vergangenen Jahr seinen Firmensitz nicht in Deutschland. Ein Trend, den Rainer Bormann, Vorstandschef von Orco Germany, nur bestätigen kann. Drei Viertel der Käufer seiner Luxus-Appartements im Quartier "Fehrbelliner" gehen an Ausländer, die meisten Interessenten kämen aus London und Los Angeles.

Nach Einschätzung von Immobilienexperten hat Berlin auch deshalb einen immensen Nachholbedarf an hochwertigen Wohnungen in nachgefragten Lagen, weil durch die Flaute am Bau Ende der 1990er-, Anfang der 2000er-Jahre kaum in den Wohnungsneubau investiert wurde. Luxuriöses Wohnen war zudem vor allem in den feinen Vororten wie Dahlem oder Grunewald angesiedelt.

Wohnen in der Innenstadt ist in

Heute ist luxuriöses Wohnen im urbanen Umfeld ein Trend, der sich in vielen deutschen Großstädten beobachten lässt. Wer genug Geld hat, leistet sich geräumige Wohnungen mit trendgerechtem Interieur aus edlen Materialien – etwa Naturstein-Badewannen und Vollholz-Parkett – allerlei Dienstleistungen und individuellen Sonderausstattungen. Bauunternehmen haben sich auf die große Nachfrage eingestellt: In Berlin und anderswo entstehen Luxus-Wohnanlagen, die versehen sind mit allem Komfort – gebaut von international renommierten Architekten. Oft auch in Zentrumsnähe: Ein neuer Trend sind vor allem "Townhouses", schlanke Wohntürme nach englischem Vorbild, die in enge Baulücken passen und den Traum vom eigenen Häuschen mit dem Leben in der Großstadt verbinden – mit Kind und Karriere mittendrin. Ein Musterbeispiel sind die "Berlin Townhouses" nahe der Museumsinsel, die gerademal 6,50 Meter breit sind.

Der Stardesigner Philippe Starck hat auf den weltweiten Trend des luxuriösen urbanen Wohnens mit der Marke Yoo reagiert, die jetzt nach Berlin kommt. Ab 2010 werden die Yoo-Wohnungen in Berlin Mitte bezugsfertig sein – gut 13.000 Quadratmeter mit Blick auf das Spreeufer. Einkommensstarken Wohnungskäufern bietet er die Möglichkeit, Luxus-Interieurs nach einem Baukasten-Prinzip zusammen zu stellen, auf Wunsch richtet ein Design-Team die Wohnungen mit den Käufern zusammen ein. In der Hamburger Hafencity und in München sind die Apartments unmöbliert für rund 6000 Euro pro Quadratmeter zu haben.

Mit dem Auto in die Wohnung

Carloft nennt sich ein innovatives Wohnkonzept, das gerade in Berlin Kreuzberg umgesetzt wird: Über einen Außen-Aufzug fährt man mit dem Auto bis vor die eigene Terrassentür – ob im dritten, im vierten oder im fünften Stock. An die großzügigen Loftwohnungen mit bis zu 200 Quadratmetern Wohnfläche schließt sich ein Terrassen-Garten an. Der Quadratmeterpreise liegt zwischen 2800 und 4000 Euro. Wer hier wohnt, kann dafür beim Umtopfen und Autoputzen am Wochenende den Fernseher oder den Sonntagsbraten im Auge behalten. Und hinterher den Abendgästen das schicke Cabriolet vom Esstisch aus präsentieren. Nach Verzögerungen beim Bau werden die ersten Carlofts voraussichtlich ab Oktober bezogen, doch scheint die kaufkräftige Schicht von dem Spartenkonzept noch nicht restlos überzeugt: erst sechs der elf Wohnungen sind bislang verkauft.

"Gefragt wird oft ein hochwertiges Gesamtkonzept", sagt Christine Dempf vom Immobilienmakler Engel & Völkers in München. Dazu gehören neben hochwertigen Materialien in Bad und Küche vor allem edle Kamine, neueste Gebäudetechnik für Sicherheit und Komfort, sowie Tiefgaragenstellplätze und große nicht einsehbare Dachterrassen. Vor allem im Bereich der Gebäudetechnik hat sich in den letzten Jahren einiges getan. In vielen Luxus-Apartments lassen sich Beleuchtung, Fenster, Heizung oder Multimedia-Equipment zentral per Touchscreen von der Eingangstür aus steuern – oder per Handy und Internet von unterwegs.

Das Comeback des Doormans

Doch Luxus-Wohnen hat ganz klar auch eine zeitliche Komponente: Wer viel Geld ausgibt, möchte sich Freizeit gleich mitkaufen. In vielen Luxus-Wohnanlagen kümmert sich ein Doorman rund um die Uhr um die Wünsche der Bewohner. Die sind oft glücklich etwa während einer Geschäftsreise den Blumenpflegedienst in Anspruch nehmen zu können, den Babysitter für den Abend oder den Einkaufsservice vorm Wochenende. Der Doormann-Service ist in angelsächsischen Ländern schon lange üblich, in Deutschland setzt er sich erst jetzt durch. Vorreiter war das Beisheim Center am Potsdamer Platz, das seit 2004 einen Fünf-Sterne-Plus-Service des Hotels The Ritz Carlton anbietet, sowohl für die Bewohner der Tower Apartments, als auch der nahen Parkside Apartments des Star-Architekten David Chipperfield.

Viele der neuen Luxus-Wohnanlagen bieten eine Infrastruktur, die gemeinschaftlich genutzt werden kann. Vor allem Wellness-Breiche und Schwimmbecken werden oft nachgefragt, aber auch Grünflächen stehen hoch im Kurs. So etwa bei dem Projekt "Fehrbelliner" von Orco Germany in Berlin Mitte. Auf dem Dach der Wohnanlage ist ein 600 Quadratmeter großer Gemeinschaftsgarten geplant, zusätzlich können die Wohnungseigentümer eine von 23 Dach-Parzellen erwerben und individuell bepflanzen – grünes Wohnen mit Blick über die Hauptstadt. Bis 2009 sollen hier 154 luxuriöse Wohneinheiten entstehen, mit gemeinsamen Schwimmbad und Spa-Bereich – diskret versteckter Luxus im Kiez. "Wir haben damit in Berlin auf einen ungebrochenen Trend reagiert", sagt Markus Feldt, Verkaufsleiter bei Orco Deutschland. "Die Leute wollen Qualität beim Wohnen – und sie wollen dafür auch Geld ausgeben."

Dienstag, 8. Juli 2008

Berlin: Historic Values

After the U.S. Civil War, the northern and southern states reunited in an era of reconstruction. After World War II, and for the duration of the Cold War, Germany was divided into East and West Germany. The end of the Cold War nearly 20 years ago ushered in an era of reunification, which wreaked havoc on the German economy. In the years since, Germany’s economy has recovered, while real estate prices have remained low.

“The German economy is looking to achieve some serious growth over the next five years,” Michel Hendrickx, managing director of Solid Rock Consultancy, an Amsterdam-based firm that provides advice on Berlin real estate investments, said.

Germany overall has made a strong recovery, but Berlin in particular is emerging from “40 years of beauty sleep,” Alexander Korte, founder and owner of Alexander Korte Real Estate and www.berlininvestment.com, said.

“It’s coming off the historical lows, and there’s enormous upside potential,” Cathal Jennings of www.berlin-brandenburgproperty.com said.

According to www.expatica.com, a website containing news and information for expatriates in western Europe, “A square meter of a redeveloped building in a top location costs around €1,500 in Berlin, while in London for example the price would be around €15,000.”

Reunification impacts prices

In 1945, after World War II, Berlin was separated into two sections: West Berlin, which was occupied by the U.S., the United Kingdom and France; and East Berlin, which was occupied by the Soviet Union.

East Berlin became the capital of East Germany, and West Berlin found itself entirely surrounded by East German territory. Cold War tensions resulted in the construction of the Berlin Wall, which enclosed West Berlin and separated it from East Berlin entirely. Construction of the Berlin Wall began in 1961. To make up for West Berlin’s geographic isolation during this period, West Germany provided subsidies to the city, even though it was not officially part of West Germany.

The Berlin Wall was torn down on November 9, 1989, reuniting the cities physically. The two cities officially became one when East and West Germany were reunified on October 3, 1990.

Government subsidies ended soon after, throwing Berlin into a financial tailspin; unemployment rose and funding for many programs had to be cut.

After the reunification of Germany, there was…a lot of excitement to invest in Berlin, and also a lot of tax subsidies given by the German federal government,” Ed Scheibler, managing partner of Berlin Real Estate Investment Partners, said. “When those disappeared, the real estate boom busted. Prices went down maybe for five, six, seven years consecutively.”

According to AllGrund, a German real estate company, “The cost of re-unification has been estimated at over $1 trillion (levied by taxation) to the German economy as a whole, with the result that today, property in Germany trades at historically low levels.”

The reunification process was a fiscal disaster for Germany overall and Berlin in particular. But time and growth are allowing the economy to regain its health. Germany’s unemployment rate recently dropped below 10 percent for the first time in 10 years.

“Property prices have started to rise,” reflecting growth in Berlin, though the prices are still great values, Damian Power, managing director of Power Overseas, an Irish company that matches clients with foreign property investments, said. “I think that’s only set to continue.”

An undervalued market

“Germany is considered the world’s most undervalued property market,” Petra Gajdosikova, founder of Alpha Real Estate Investments, a London-based company that helps foreign investors invest in central and eastern Europe, said. “Property prices actually collapsed in the early ’90s, after the reunification of Germany.”

“Germany as a country was under pressure,” Korte said, but it now has “a strong economy.”



"We have a really exceptional opportunity in Germany,” Julian Power of Berlin Capital Ltd. said. “The economy is looking healthier than it has in years. But at the same time you’ve got incredibly low property values.”

Berlin in particular has some of the lowest real estate prices in Europe—“often on a par with eastern European countries” and capitals, such as Sofia, Bucharest and Warsaw, Julian Power said.

Prices in Berlin are not only bargains when compared to other European capitals, they are bargains within Germany. “The property prices in Berlin are…30 to 50 percent lower than in other German cities,” Gajdosikova said. It is “the extremely strong rental market, with very high yields, of course, that makes Berlin more attractive than most of the other cities in Germany.”

Berlin’s property prices are at about 50 percent of the levels they were at before reunification, Gajdosikova said. “The German prices are among the cheapest in Europe. This is quite an exceptional affordability.”

Neighborhoods

Central areas, such as Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg and Tiergarten, are already well established. “I really like Mitte,” Scheibler said. “It’s where the Reichstag is, the Brandenburg Gate, a lot of fabulous restaurants. It’s the most international of the different districts in Berlin.”

With prices so low across the board in Berlin, “I’m very bullish on buying in a very good location,” Scheibler said. “You might have to pay more, but the slope of your appreciation curve will be higher.”

“Capital appreciation will be found more readily in areas like Mitte, Charlottenburg, Wilmersdorf,” Jennings said. “The stock of housing…is considerably more up-to-date.”

“Charlottenburg would be the Park Avenue of Berlin,” he said.

Several other neighborhoods are increasing in popularity and desirability. “Besides the classic central areas in former West Berlin such as Charlottenburg, Wilmersdorf and Schoeneberg, properties are especially sought after in Kreuzberg, a trendy area,” according to Expatica. In addition, “spots in up and coming trendy eastern Berlin areas of Prenzlauer Berg and increasingly Friedrichshain are becoming especially desirable.”


Berlin's neighborhoods, with Prenzlauer Berg highlighted in blue. Courtesy of Mike Jurkun at www.jurkun.de

Friedrichshain, Simon-Dach-Strasse and Kreuzberg are all undergoing revitalization and gaining popularity.

“The highest yield rates will be in the most risky areas,” Scheibler said. However, “The best properties, perhaps, with the most upward growth, are in the center of the city.”

In addition to Berlin’s three existing airports, the new Berlin Brandenburg International Airport is under construction southeast of the city, with completion scheduled for 2011. As a result, outlying areas toward the airport are now attracting more interest.

Construction of the airport will create approximately 100,000 jobs in the next two years, Damian Power said. “That is an up-and-coming area, and will be very interesting, with studio apartments there starting at around €50,000.”

Gajdosikova said that due diligence is essential. “Do your research. Understand why some areas are good and others aren’t,” she said. “It’s not always the cheapest areas that do make sense for a good return on investment.”


The Berliner Reichstag in Berlin

Culture and business

As Germany’s capital, Berlin draws both tourists and residents. It houses the federal government and hosts diverse cultural offerings. Berlin is popular among young Europeans, as evidenced by MTV Europe’s recent relocation to Berlin. The average age in the eastern area of the city is around 28 to 32 years old, Hendrickx said.

There are hundreds of cultural sites in Berlin, including museums, art galleries, theaters, operas, symphonies, zoos and historical sites. According to the United Nations Educational and Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), there are more than 1,500 cultural events in Berlin each day.

“Berlin combines the culture of New York, the traffic system of Tokyo, the nature of Seattle, and the historical treasures of, well, Berlin,” professor Hiroshi Motomura, a scholar at the American Academy, said in an interview that appeared in Berlin magazine.

Berlin already has a healthy tourism industry, and it has recently begun growing as a business center. The increased simplicity of traveling to Berlin could further boost its status as a business destination.

“Berlin is growing,” Gajdosikova said. “It’s a very attractive business destination, so therefore the prospects for the medium to long term for Berlin are very good.”

“There is unbeatable infrastructure here in Berlin,” Jennings said.

Market risks

Berlin’s unemployment rate is still relatively high, and the city is €60 billion in debt. “The city has humongous municipal debts and real challenges as far as unemployment, so it’s not without risk,” Scheibler said.


Source: Colliers, The Economist, Nabormessler, UBS, www.alphare.net

Dresden recently paid down its debt by selling 48,000 properties to investors. In contrast, Berlin refuses to sell its 250,000 residential properties. “Berlin’s left-wing government…is strictly against selling off state-owned residences,” according to Expatica.

If the city changed its mind and sold some of its properties, property prices would likely initially drop as supply grew and then rise as private ownership increased rents, driving some renters to become homebuyers.

“There’s a big rental market—only 13 percent of the population in Berlin actually own their own homes,” Julian Power said.

A low homeownership rate means that the resale market is comprised mainly of other investors, which results in lower prices for sellers. There is, however, a lot of potential for profit should owning, rather than renting, become the norm.

Because of the high percentage of renters, “there’s a lot of need and desire and demand for rental space,” Scheibler said. “You have to understand that it’s not like the United States or England, where you’re going to come in and have the really low rents and have those rents escalate in a dramatic fashion over a short period of time.”

That’s because the balance between landlords and tenants favors tenants in Berlin. “The tenants’ rights are very, very strong,” attorney Boris Reschucha, an associate at BMH Bräutigam & Partner, said. “The leasing law…is favoring the tenants. The rights to raise the rents are restricted.”

Although Berlin’s relatively young population is growing, Germany as a whole has an aging, declining population. This could lead to an oversupply of housing, which would diminish the profit potential for investors seeking renters. In order to maintain a steady housing demand, Germany will need to bolster its population, perhaps through immigration.

Finally, the real estate market has picked up substantially in the past two years. GSW, Berlin’s largest residential property firm, sold 65,000 units to a U.S. investor and its partner two years ago. As a result, “Berlin is a market now that is quite active,” Scheibler said.

The investment process

Germany is a country favorable for foreign investors. “The government has always respected the ownership interest of Germans as well as any foreigner,” Reschucha said.

“A foreigner is absolutely equal to a German,” Korte said. “Absolutely, 100 percent equal.”

Germany features freehold property ownership. “Freehold is very typical. We very rarely have leasehold property ownership,” attorney Patrick Hohl, an associate at BMH Bräutigam & Partner, said.

Banks lost a lot of money after the reunification boom and bust; thus, “German banks are still extremely cautious and quite conservative, so financing is not easy. We’re starting to see that change, though. More and more, the banks are now realizing that the market is now stabilized,” Julian Power said.

“I think you’re going to need 50 percent of your all-in costs,” Scheibler said. “For example, in Friedrichshain …you can buy a beautiful 100-square meter [about 1,075 square feet] apartment for €200,000.”

The purchasing process is mediated by an impartial notary who works for both parties in the transaction. One result of this impartiality is that, “We do not really have anything like title insurance in Germany because the system is so safe that there’s not really a market,” Reschucha said.

Working with a notary for the sale and purchase agreement is compulsory, and notary fees are approximately 1 percent of the purchase price, Hohl said.

“Then you have the registry fees of the local courts handling the registration. This is 0.5 percent of the purchase price,” Hohl said. “The real estate transfer tax is at 4.5 percent at the moment.”

The standard asking real estate commission in Germany is 5 or 6 percent, Julian Power said. “As there’s so much competition in the market at the moment, so much interest, it’s actually becoming more and more normal for people to pay high commissions in order to secure good buildings.”

Calculating a property’s land tax is complicated, Hohl said. “The good thing is that the landlord can fully charge back the land tax…to the tenants if this is provided for in the lease agreement. That’s a very common provision in every lease agreement,” Hohl said. “Having a living space of 2,600 square meters, [the land tax] would be €3,500 per year, approximately.”

Foreign investors in Berlin will face the same hurdles that all foreign investors face: issues of time and distance as well as the difficulty of finding the right people to assist with each step in the process.

“I wouldn’t recommend to anyone who lives in a foreign country to try and manage [foreign investment properties] themselves,” Julian Power said. “There’s a lot of companies providing management service.” Monthly fees are around €25 to €30 per apartment, he said.

“It’s really crucial to have somebody who can speak German and English to provide for good correspondence and communication,” Reschucha said.

Conclusion

The city of Berlin is full of culture and investment opportunity. With an improving economy and established and up-and-coming neighborhoods, Berlin may offer real estate investors some of the best value in Europe.

“Post-reunification, it’s been a very long, difficult road for the Germans,” Scheibler said. “I think prices are going to rise steadily over the next decade there, and I think it’s a good time to get in.”

Published on:
Sunday, July 01, 2007
Written by: Trista Winnie

source: http://www.nuwireinvestor.com/articles/berlin-historic-values-51111.aspx

Shops Shape Up in Berlin

Quelle: www.stadtentwicklung.berlin.de


With more retail real estate deals in 2007 than any other German city, Berlin's shopping areas are certainly on the move — and nowhere more so than the blocks around Hackescher Markt, now a magnet for progressive labels and streetwear.

Samstag, 5. Juli 2008

Investing in German Real Estate: Berlin

While the U.S. real estate market struggles in the wake of the subprime crisis, the German real estate market could be on the rise. Although Germany’s real estate market struggled during the first half of this decade, values are recovering and experts predict that by 2009 the situation could provide worthwhile opportunities for investors.

Germany is home to more than 82 million people, making it the second most populous European country after Russia, and it is slightly smaller than the state of Montana, according to the CIA World Factbook. The population is shrinking at a rate of -0.044 percent because of low birth rates. “In the very long term...[there will be] shrinking of the population. Over, say, the next 40 years it will diminish by 10 to 15 percent,” Jacky Starck, owner and chief executive officer of Starck Management Consulting, an independent international real estate investment consulting firm in Berlin, said. However, because of shifts in cultural and economic ideas, it is still likely that the demand for housing will increase in Germany over the coming years.

Germany, the world’s third largest economy, had a GDP of $2.8 trillion in 2007. The vast majority of these funds go into the services sector (69.5 percent), with industry making up most of the remainder (29.6 percent). It is one of the largest and most technologically advanced producers of iron, steel, machinery and electronics in the world, according to the CIA World Factbook. Germany adopted the Euro as its currency in 1999.

The German government is a federal republic and is divided into 16 sovereign states. The city of Berlin is the country’s capital.

Why invest in German real estate?

Germany is a renter’s market, with only 45 percent of homes being owner occupied, according to a press release from HBOS, a U.K.-based investment services group. In Berlin, only 13 percent of residents own their own homes, according to Julian Power of Berlin Capital Ltd.
It has the second lowest rate of owner occupation in Europe, after Switzerland, according to Starck. By contrast, in Spain the vast majority—86 percent—of the population owns their homes, he said.

Low homeownership means the resale market is mainly composed of other investors, which results in lower prices for sellers. But investors could earn significant profits if the market turns to owning rather than renting.

Additionally, “there is no restriction on foreigners buying German property,” Joern Schaemann, attorney-at-law with Schaemann Law Offices in Berlin, said. Although foreigners may encounter difficulties with financing—because of U.S. banks not wanting to finance property in a foreign country and German banks being reluctant to fund investors with income in the U.S.—the purchase process itself is fairly straightforward.

Germany is a relatively safe market for foreign investors. “The safety is relatively high because of the property registry. If you look into the property registry you see [potential issues] with liens and other problems from the legal side. It’s relatively safe to do it that way,” Martin R. Weinhardt, rechtsanwalt (attorney-at-law) with Weinhardt & Associates in Utah, said.

And the subprime crisis and credit crunch have had a minimal effect on Germany because of the extremely low usage of adjustable rate loans. 99 percent of the country’s loans have fixed rates, Starck said. The small percentage of loans with adjustable rates are fixed for 10 years before the rate can change.

The German real estate market

Stark believes that the demand for housing in Germany is likely to rise over the next several years because of changes in the culture and economy. “The number of houses will increase because of new ways of life, more families separating and people choosing to live with someone else...it’s a trend in Europe and especially in Germany that we will have more households in the next 10 years,” he said.

And, because the rental market in the country is so active, this could be good news for investors. Rental properties can potentially provide investors with income up to 6 or 7 percent, according to Starck.

But investors should know that Germany has strict laws to protect the interests of its renters, and difficult tenants may prove tough to deal with as a result. “If you have renters that are problem renters that don’t pay on time or don’t pay at all...[or] renters that do damage to the property and things like that, you can do something but the process is very complicated, costly and lengthy because there are so many protections for the renter,” Weinhardt said. “You [also] can’t just buy a property and raise the rent...there are very strict restrictions on how much you can raise the rent and so on.” These restrictions vary by region.

Starck recommends sticking near major cities to ensure income from a German real estate investment. The areas surrounding Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Cologne-Dusseldorf, Stuttgart and Berlin all offer excellent investment opportunities. He said holiday rentals are not a big market in Germany, but that rental property for the elderly may prove to be a profitable investment in the future.
For those interested in more short-term investments, Germany may not be the best option. “You cannot buy something [in Germany] and sell it three years later with appreciation,” Starck said. “In Germany you have very good rental income...but you will have some more difficulties [getting] appreciation in the short term. You’ll have to wait at least 10 years.”

The purchase process

The real estate purchase process in Germany is not drastically different from that in the United States. Foreigners’ property rights are equal to those of German citizens and there are no special requirements for U.S. citizens to be eligible to purchase German property.

The process is overseen by a German notary, which is different in background and function from a notary in the U.S. A German notary must have a J.D. degree and essentially serves the purpose of a third-party attorney by advising both the buyer and the seller, according to Weinhardt. The contract does not become effective until it has been notarized.

Investors would be wise to hire a German accountant to ensure that all taxes are properly paid. “There’s a double tax treaty between the United States and Germany. Income from real estate for the most part falls under the German tax [laws], even if the investor is in the United States,” Weinhardt said. “That can, under certain circumstances, be an advantage. But it can also be a disadvantage because German taxes, in general, are relatively high.”

“One should allow for 10 percent of the investment costs for...the agent’s fees, the stamp duty—3.5 to 4.5 percent—and legal fees,” Schaemann said. Property taxes vary depending on the region and the value of the property, and are typically paid on a quarterly basis.

Finding someone who speaks the language and knows the local market and laws is vital for investors considering purchasing German real estate. U.S. investors in search of a German real estate attorney can contact the German-American Chamber of Commerce or the German consulate for recommendations .

NuWire Investor
Published on:
Monday, April 28, 2008
Written by:
Cali Zimmerman

Dienstag, 1. Juli 2008

Estavis Sells Two Real Estate Portfolios for 61 Million Euros

July 1 (Bloomberg) -- Estavis AG, a German real-estate company, sold two real estate portfolios for a total of 61 million euros ($96.1 million).


Sales proceeds will be included in the company's 2009 fiscal year, which starts today, Berlin-based Estavis said in a statement late last night. Estavis received 44 million euros and 17 million euros for the sale of the two portfolios.


In February, the company cut its forecast for the just-ended fiscal year because investment funding is drying up. It lowered its revenue outlook to ``light sales growth'' for the 2008 fiscal year from 198 million euros a year earlier. In November, Estavis forecast sales of 300 million euros.


From its base in Berlin, Estavis serves as a market maker between private Germany property sellers and the institutional real estate market. The company also manages its own portfolio.
Estavis fell 16 cents, or 2.7 percent, to close at 5.74 euros in Frankfurt yesterday, giving the company a market value of 46.5 million euros. The shares have dropped 80 percent in the past year.


To contact the reporter on this story: Nadja Brandt in Los Angeles at nbrandt@bloomberg.net

source: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601100&sid=ahqxjn7eOsjk&refer=germany