The Malta Independent 19 April 2024, Friday
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Malta property market warning – KPMG report

Friday, 4 October 2019, 10:05 Last update: about 6 years ago

The property market has slowed down, according to a KPMG report that warned shoddy works risked giving Malta a reputation as a destination for working-class migrants.

The report noted that in the high-end property market, the quality of construction and finishing standards often failed to meet the expectations of high net worth individuals.

High-end developments were not performing as well as expected, the report says.

The Construction Industry and Property Market Report was published during a seminar at The Excelsior Hotel in Floriana yesterday.

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But the slowdown in the property market did not seem to worry operators, with several clarifying this was simply the industry returning to normal levels of demand after a period of stronger-than-usual performance.

KPMG found that rental properties priced at under €1,000 a month are in short supply and properties at under €600 a month are very limited.

"This has led to an increase in property sharing and has also driven some operators to provide lodging for their foreign employees at discounted prices or at no cost," the report reads.

Operators who were consulted were of the opinion that there is an excess supply of properties in the mid-range, typically priced between €1,000 and €2,000 a month.

 "One suggested reason was that many properties were priced at approximately €1,300 per month to meet the requirements of the Individual Investors Program," the report says, adding that high-end developments were not performing as well as expected.

"From a demand perspective, higher rents feeding into higher wage pressures on employers negatively impact Malta's attractiveness to foreign investors and workers."

According to a 2016 Central Bank of Malta assessment on the Maltese housing market, higher market rental rates only affect approximately 2% of the Maltese population. However, if property prices continued to rise at levels outpacing increases in income, some segments of society could be priced out of the market. 

Some operators told KPMG that the construction and finishing standards applied to the upper end of local properties often fail to meet the expectations of high net worth individuals.

Some claimed that Malta is quickly building a reputation as a destination for working-class migrants and tourists as a result of local tendencies to accept compromised quality as a means of cutting costs.

Industry operators said that local banks too have played a role in stultifying the potential of the housing market since some, they claim, were downright difficult to access.

"Industry operators criticised the local banking sector for the bureaucracy and challenges being experienced by non-EU residents when carrying out banking in Malta. Views expressed by the major banks acknowledged that foreign nationals may sometimes be subject to due diligence checks that take longer to be processed," the report reads. 

The report cites other potential reasons for the slowdown, notably the presence of rogue developers and lack of enforcement, with construction sites often experiencing fatal incidents, and the risk of a housing bubble when house prices are no longer necessarily reflecting economic fundamentals.


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