Property Investment in Spain

May 27, 2008

Seakers UK Property Group have a Property Investment Opportunity in Spain

  • Managed by a 4 Star Hotel and Spa Complex
  • All Properties Discounted by 30% of Asking Price
  • Apartments from €141,000
  • 3% Rental Return Guaranteed for First 3 Years (investor Price)
  • Up to €10,000 Cash Back 14 days From Notary (completion)
  • Fully Furnished to the Highest Standard
  • Siemens Appliances
  • 30 Days Personal Use Per Year or can be Rented Out
  • Full Lending inclusive of fees Available (subject to criteria)
  • Rental Contract is Renegotiable after 3 Years
  • Beautiful Location
  • One of the Best Addresses in the Murcia Region
  • Property Prices still Increasing in this Costa

To take advantage of this investment opportunity call our office on 01202 744 884 or Paul on 07969038638.

Click here for further details of this Seakers Property

Click here to register with Seakers Property Group

Click here to find out more about property investment with Seakers
Local Area

With a temperate climate with an annual average of 21° and 320 days of annual sunshine, the Mar Menor in the province of Murcia is familiar as a preferred holiday and golfing destination with a superb climate.

Due to it position directly in front of the sea, only La Serena enjoys a unique microclimate tempered by fresh sea breeze in the summer or winter.

The town center of Los Alcázares, just minutes walk away, was once a small fishing village, is today one of the referrals in southern Europe for stylish living – truly cosmopolitan with top class restaurants and leisure facilities.

The historic center of the town retains its Moorish and Spanish flavours, with its narrow streets and alleys redolent of orange blossom and lined with flower-filled balconies.

This authentic pueblo provides a wide range of services, allowing you to pursue whatever your heart desires.

Enjoy a god quality meal, an afternoon shopping spree or have a coffee at the
boardwalk front line beach.

Los Alcázares is bordered by 7 kilometers of beaches with wonderful white sand, among which we find Los Narejos beach, which is one of the six best beaches in Spain and that, has been awarded with the prestigious Q for Quality.

La Concha beach is the home of the nautical club including the yachting harbour where you can practice any type of nautical sport.


Property Investment in China

May 27, 2008

Beijing´s investment in real estate development totaled 39.47 billion Yuan (US$5.16 billion) in the first four months of this year.  According to the statistics that were jointly published by Beijing Municipal Bureau and National Bureau of Statistics, this was an increase by 11.6%; however, this was 8.7% less than the growth in the same period of last year.

Also, published in the report; investment in residential buildings was 20.68 billion Yuan, up 10.2% year on year, but down 29.4%.

In the first four months, the number of completed areas of housing was 5.137 million sqm, rising 14.7% year on year. This also, included 3.781 million sqm of residential buildings, an increase of, 26.2%, and accounting for 73.6% of total completed areas.

Investment funds in real estate development were mainly in the form of bank loans, self-raised funds and earnest and advance money received by developers. Funds available for real estate development enterprises, in Beijing amounted to 80.75 billion Yuan in the first four months, an increase of 8% year on year.

Of the total real estate development funds, loans were 21.88 billion Yuan, a decrease of 0.3% year on year; self-raised funds, 19.33 billion Yuan, up 50%; earnest and advance money, 27.46 billion Yuan, up 8.5%; and individual loans, 7.18 billion Yuan, down 17.2%.


Property Investment Opportunity in Wigan

May 19, 2008

Seakers UK Property Group have six 3 bedroom hoeses available in Hindley, Wigan:

  • Incentives Of 21%
  • Incentives Up To £38,629
  • Market Price From £159,950
  • Investor Price From £126,361
  • Yield Up To 8.01%
  • Potential Rental Income £910 PCM
  • 3 Bedroom Houses
  • 2 Bathrooms
  • Parking
  • Simultaneous Exchange & Completion

To take advantage of this investment opportunity call our office on 01202 744 884 or Paul on 07969038638.

Click here for further details of this Seakers Property

Click here to register with Seakers Property Group

Click here to find out more about property investment with Seakers

About Wigan
With a population of about 300,000 across an area of 77 square miles, Wigan is one of the largest metropolitan districts in England. The borough is based around the two main towns of Wigan and Leigh, and several smaller towns and villages of the former Lancashire coalfield. Wigan is the most westerly district of the county of Greater Manchester, although many local people (and the Royal Mail) prefer to consider the area part of Lancashire.

About Hindley
The earliest surviving documentary reference to Hindley, located in the centre of the borough, dates from the year 1212.

Until the late 19th century a tourist attraction in the shape of two ‘burning wells’ existed in Hindley, caused by the natural seepage of inflammable coal gas through water.

Nineteenth century Hindley is indelibly linked with the name ‘Eckersley’. Colonel Nathaniel Eckersley lived at Laurel House and served with the Duke of Wellington. A ceremonial sword, presented to him for his service at the military station in Manchester established after the Peterloo riots, can be seen in the town’s library.

His great nephew, also Nathaniel, was a wealthy Wigan mill-owner who built the library and local park with money left by his friend, local scholar and landowner John Leyland.

Much residential development has taken place in recent years, here and in nearby Hindley Green. The area to the north is particularly attractive, including picturesque Borsdane Wood and Hindley golf course, centred on 18th century Hindley Hall.

Hindley has its own baths, railway station and also a sports centre, which it shares with a local high school. The former Park High School (once Hindley Grammar School) is now a major educational resource centre for teachers.


Industrial Developments in The Slovak Republic

May 19, 2008

Three new stretches of highway were put into operation on December 11, the Pravda Daily reported on December 12. Construction of two of them was launched by the previous government of Mikuláš Dzurinda, while construction of the third was launched nine years ago. The most important stretch is a 7.5-kilometre section from Hričovské Podhradie to Žilina-Strážov, which cost about Sk5.3 billion. It was built in a record short time of two years.

GETRAG Ford Transmissions Slovakia officially opened its new transmission factory in the Kechnec industrial park in eastern Slovakia on November 22. This is the first factory of the international transmission systems producer, and it will introduce a new technology to make dual clutch transmissions, the SITA newswire wrote.

“Through the introduction of a new technology, we are entering the automatic transmission market,” said the company’s executive director, Mihir Kotecha. “We are thus opening opportunities for the significant growth of our company and our partners, meaning customers and suppliers in Kechnec, Košice Region and Slovakia.”

The Kechnec-based plant is planned to produce 110,000 gearboxes for cars and 100,000 motorcycle transmissions each year. It will hire up to 450 employees. The plant’s production capacity is to reach 220,000 transmissions a year by 2010. By that year, Getrag Ford plans to create another 300 jobs, mainly in technical professions. Construction on the plant started in July 2005 and cost €300 million (Sk10 billion). Production of motorcycle transmissions for BMW and Harley Davidson started in November 2006.

The internet bank mBank officially launched operations in Slovakia through its website during the last weekend of November. The virtual bank, which is a retail electronic banking division of one of the biggest Polish financial institutions, BRE Bank SA, plans to win at least 100,000 clients by the end of 2010. It expects to provide about €500 million (Sk16.6 billion) in loans and roughly €91.1 million in client deposits, the SITA newswire reported.


Tenanted Terraced Properties in Blackbourn and Chorley

May 13, 2008

We have several tenanted terraced properties in Blackburn and Chorley that offer property investment opportunities

  • Yields up to 7.6%
  • Incentives of 15%
  • Incentives up To £19,500
  • Market price from £75,000
  • Investor price from £63,750
  • Yields up to 7.6%
  • All tenanted
  • Flooring included
  • Ready now

Click here for further details of this Seakers Property

Click here to register with Seakers Property Group

Click here to find out more about property investment with Seakers
To take advantage of this investment opportunity call our office on 01202 744884 or Paul on 07969 038638.

Local Area

Blackburn
Blackburn is a large town in Lancashire, England. It lies to the north of the West Pennine Moors on the southern edge of the Ribble Valley, 8.9 miles (14.3 km) east of the city of Preston, and 20 miles (32 km) north-northwest of the city of Manchester. Blackburn is bounded to the south by Darwen, which together form the unitary authority area of Blackburn with Darwen, Blackburn being the administrative centre. Blackburn has a population of 105,085, whilst the wider borough has a population of 137,470.

Noted as a former mill town, textiles have been produced in Blackburn since Flemish weavers settled in the area during the 15th century, developing a wool and cotton weaving tradition. James Hargreaves, inventor of the spinning jenny, was a weaver in Blackburn. The urbanisation and development of Blackburn largely coincided with the introduction of textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution however. It was a boomtown of the Industrial Revolution, and amongst the first industrialised towns in the world.

The textile sector in Blackburn fell into a terminal decline from the mid-20th century. Since this time, Blackburn has faced similar challenges to other post-industrial northern towns, including deindustrialisation, economic deprivation and housing issues. Since the 1950s the town has experienced significant levels of immigration, particularly from India and Pakistan, and subsequently has the third highest proportion of Muslims in England and Wales and the highest in the United Kingdom outside London. Blackburn continues to experience strained community relations in some areas. Blackburn and the town centre in particular has seen significant investment and redevelopment in the past 15 years. Regeneration has been bolstered by monies from government and the European Regional Development Fund.

Chorley
Chorley is a market town in Lancashire, England. The town’s wealth came principally from the cotton industry. As recently as the 1970’s the skyline was dominated by numerous factory chimneys, but most are now demolished: remnants of the industrial past include Morrison’s chimney and a few other mill buildings, and the streets of terraced houses for mill workers. Chorley is known as the home of the Chorley cake.


Good Prospects for Property Investment in Bulgaria

May 13, 2008

Named the world’s strongest price riser in 2007, Bulgaria’s property market is successfully keeping up its momentum in the first month of the new year, realtors said.

The capital city of Sofia and the Black Sea town of Varna are recording the most impressive growth with asking price levels in the most expensive districts nearing EUR 1500/m2, shows data of the local real estate site www.imot.bg.

The districts of Yavorov, Ivan Vazov and downtown Sofia remain the costliest residential areas in the capital, commanding prices of EUR 1467/m2, EUR 1466/m2 and EUR 1425/m2 respectively.

Prices of residential property in the most expensive districts of coastal Varna, such as the Greek neighbourhood, overtake those in the capital with offers averaging EUR 1561/m2.

Experts point out that the sale prices levels are usually from 5% to 10% lower that the asking prices.

Bulgaria recorded the world’s strongest house price growth last year amidst a global cooling of the property market. A study carried out by Global Property Guide (GPG) set the country’s house price growth at 30.6% (15.4% in real terms) to end-Q3 2007 from a year earlier.


Investment Opportunity – Commercial Repossession in West Byfleet

May 8, 2008

Seakers UK Property Group have a repossessed commercial property for sale in West Byfleet

  • 25% BMV, SURREY
  • Incentives Of 25%
  • Incentives Of £50,000
  • Market Price From £200,000
  • Investor Price From £150,000
  • Potential Rental Income £3,750 PCM
  • Good Yard & Parking To The Front
  • Property Is Capable Of Sub-Division
  • Close To Byfleet & Junction 11 Of The M25
  • Ready Now

Click here for further details of this Seakers Property

Click here to register with Seakers Property Group

Click here to find out more about property investment with Seakers

To take advantage of this investment opportunity call our office on 01202 744884 or Paul on 07969 038638.

Description

  • Ground Floor
  • 439.68 Sq M – 4,733 Sq Ft
  • Workshop area which could be developed for office use.
  • First Floor
  • 439.68 Sq M – 4,733 Sq Ft
  • Split into 11 offices from 200Sq Ft, suitable for Multiple Company Occupancy.
  • Total Floor Area 879.36 – 9,466

Local Area
The West Byfleet area includes the village centre next to West Byfleet station and the surrounding residential area, built during the inter war period. West Byfleet is located to the west of the M25 motorway, which separates it from Byfleet. Many of the residential areas with fewer houses have considerable character while the housing to the north of the station is generally older.

The focus of the Local Plan for West Byfleet and the surrounding area is on protecting the environment and ensuring that any new development is in keeping with the existing character of the area. As a result, development of a modest scale, appropriate to the area concerned, will be permitted in the village centre and existing residential areas, while important open spaces and historic buildings will be protected. Only very limited types of building will be permitted in the Green Belt, including buildings for sport, agriculture and house extensions.

The following includes a brief description of some elements of the main features of the West Byfleet area together with more general information and the relevant Local Plan polices.

West Byfleet village centre is the second largest shopping centre in the Borough after Woking town centre. The centre in 1999 had over 90 businesses including a range of shops, offices, banks and restaurants.

The centre is focused around Old Woking Road/Parvis Road, Station Approach and the Railway Station. Two shopping parades in Station Approach and Rosemount Parade have a very distinctive architectural character (Arts and Crafts) and have been designated as Conservation Areas by the Council to protect this. The Local Plan:

  • Seeks environmental improvements and better access to the centre. These will be in keeping with the Council’s own programme of improvements which have included repaving, new signs and landscaping.
  • Encourages small office, shop, leisure and community developments.
  • Allows the change of use of shops to other uses appropriate to the area (financial services and restaurants/takeaways) which maintain the economic health of the centre, provided it does not involve the loss of the supermarket which plays an anchor role in the centre and that an adequate range of shops remain.

The Camphill Industrial Estate provides a range of local employment opportunities. This is an important industrial area which should be retained. However, some of the buildings may require redevelopment to provide suitable accommodation for the needs of modern businesses.

The Local Plan identifies the former MoD site at Broadoaks, Parvis Road for potential redevelopment to provide modern offices. Proposals will however need to respect the Listed Buildings on the site and its open character. Local Plan policies:

  • Allow industrial or warehousing development at Camphill Industrial Estate provided it does not harm the environment of the area.
  • Allow the redevelopment of existing employment sites elsewhere in the area to provide suitable modern business accommodation. These should be broadly similar in scale to the existing buildings.
  • Will not permit the loss of any existing employment sites unless the business activity adversely affects local residents. In such cases a less harmful employment activity or housing will be permitted.
  • Allows office redevelopment at Broadoaks provided it has no greater impact on the open character of the Green Belt than the existing buildings. A planning application has been submitted for an office redevelopment of the site to provide around 18,000 sq.m. of floorspace (194,000 sq.ft.). Following a Public Inquiry, the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions granted planning permission for this redevelopment in December 2000

Property Investment in Bulgaria

May 8, 2008

Kavarna is creating a new wave of interest for Property in Bulgaria state Obelisk, with Kavarna Bay in particular being developed with exclusivity and high quality in mind.

The region of Kavarna will not only cater for the sun-sea-sand traveller but also the yachtsman, the golfer and the fishing enthusiast. Over the last few months Kavarna, as a resort, is turning into one of the most attractive destinations for property investment and development. With only a 30 minute transfer time from Varna airport and 38km from Romania, the Black Sea town of Kavarna is sure to become a popular playground for the tourist market.

The area will benefit from a proposed ?15 million development of Bulgaria’s FIA approved Formula 1 racing complex, project managed by British company Berkeley Square Trading Limited. The significant level of inward investment is apparent, with the approval of plans to enhance Kavarna’s port into a new modern marina and yacht club specifically targeted to the luxury client?le.

Two golf courses which have been designed by the world famous Gary Player are currently under construction, one of which will be in the top five largest in the world. The mild climate in Kavarna is conducive to the construction of the golf courses and once the golf courses are complete the rental potential of the region will be phenomenal and yields are set to fly.

Andrea Elliott, Business Analyst at Obelisk comments ‘The economic success and the future vision for Kavarna is not speculative; ?700 million has been invested in Kavarna within the last four years from internal and external investors.

Many positive influences include mild weather conditions, excellent sporting facilities, quality developments and the close proximity to Varna airport, all of which enhance the areas investment potential dramatically. To the property investor this will mean the luxury of year round rental income and access to a very dynamic resale market.’

This modern and contemporary town stands on an ancient site dating back to the second millennium BC, providing the tourist with an eclectic mix of history, art and culture. Reconstructed roads and infrastructure, well developed services and a fast growing economic and cultural mix is catching the attention of both the Bulgarian and foreign investors.

Kavarna is also one of the biggest agriculture producers in Bulgaria and lends itself to the possibilities of competitive production and attracting new employment, partners, creditors, and investors.

A lot of Bulgarian, international and foreign partnership companies, with many branches already in operation, have invested heavily in Kavarna all boosting the areas economic conditions and consumer spending.


2 and 3 Bedroom Houses in Wrexham

May 7, 2008

Seakers Property have 2 and 3 Bedroom Houses available in Wrexham:

  • Incentives Of 18%
  • Incentives Up To £30,150
  • Market Price From £134,500
  • Investor Price From £110,290
  • 2 Bed Potential Rental Income £650 PCM
  • 3 Bed Potential Rental Income £975 PCM
  • Parking
  • 2 & 3 Bedroom Houses
  • Ready Now

Click here for further details of this Seakers Property

Click here to register with Seakers Property Group

Click here to find out more about property investment with Seakers

To take advantage of this investment opportunity call our office on 01202 744884 or Paul on 07969 038638.

The Local Area

A beautiful location…
Located on the Shropshire/Welsh border, the peaceful village of Penley benefits from being right in the heart of beautiful, rolling countryside, yet has so much on its doorstep.

Close to Wrexham…
Penmere Park is ideally located for those looking for a rural location, but needing to be within an easy drive of nearby towns. Just 10 miles away from Penley is Wrexham, the largest town in North Wales, which offers a good choice of shops and several markets, as well as the usual amenities one would expect from a major town.

There is the Waterworld swimming and leisure complex, the Wrexham museum, the County Borough library and St. Giles Church, which has a spectacular spire.

Outside of the town centre, Wrexham offers other attractions including Farmworld, that features a working dairy farm, and Chirk Castle (a magnificent example of a Marcher Fortress).

and Ellesmere…
The area also boasts the Llangollen Canal, which is arguably one of the prettiest stretches of waterways in the country. Four miles along the Llangollen Canal from Penley is Ellesmere.

This pretty market town that features excellent examples of Tudor, Georgian and Victorian architecture. It also boasts a spectacular mere, with its fascinating visitor centre that details the creation of nine meres, unique landscaping and the wildlife that populate the area.

Perfect for commuting…
Situated just off the A539, Penmere Park also offers an easy commute to Whitchurch, only nine miles away, while Shrewsbury and Chester can both be reached in less than an hour.


Property Investment in the Ukraine

May 7, 2008

As Ukraine winds itself up to co-host the European Cup in football in 2012, more than one title is at stake. In addition to the obvious, winning the tournament, the other title concerns land and what’s built on it. About a billion euros need to be spent in the next four years to accommodate the legions of fans who will attend the matches. And that’s just to meet UEFA’s requirements. By some estimates, Kyiv is experiencing a deficit of over a million square meters of living space each year, as people from all over the country flock to the capital. Indeed, we are witnessing a virtual explosion in property development throughout Ukraine, as shopping centers, apartment blocks and new housing developments continue to pop up around the country.

This flurry of real estate activity has finally attracted the attention of Europe’s major property players – large institutional and hedge funds, mortgage banks and asset managers interested in the significant opportunities presented by the Ukrainian property market. However, these actors play by rules different from those that have governed the market to date. In the past, many properties under development were conveyed through sweetheart deals between state or municipal authorities and their cronies, by taking advantage of incomplete and inconsistent legislation governing the sale and transfer of land. But unlike speculators, who look to cash out after flipping a property, or developers, who may exit soon after completing a project, institutional investors are interested in growing the underlying value of their holdings. In short, they require a clean, certain and stable title to the asset that they hold.

Therefore, one of the critical challenges facing the new Ukrainian government, whatever its color combination, is to improve the transparency and predictability of the Ukrainian property regime. Broadly speaking, this involves the following:

Implement a land title registry system. Nothing satisfies an investor like a certificate that describes your property in detail, stipulates that you are the owner and lists all of the private and public charges on the property. Best of all, it’s government-guaranteed! Sound far-fetched? Not at all. Such a system, backed by the World Bank and other donors, has been basically ready for implementation for about five years. The regime would involve merging the state cadastre (which provides the legal description of the land) with existing registers of legal rights to immoveable property (such as the register of hypothecs). Nothing, except a small amendment to the Land Code and bickering over which government agency will control the registry, stands in the way of establishing an institution that can ensure market transparency and predictability. As a result, financial institutions will lend money (secured by transparent charges on immoveable property) to businesses at lower interest rates, which will facilitate the development of credit markets and stimulate investment and economic growth.

Make land a commodity. It is time to finally remove the moratorium on the sale of agricultural land. Ostensibly put in place to protect villagers, this cynical piece of populist propaganda has allowed speculators to accumulate vast tracts of agricultural land through the acquisition of leasehold interests and lock-up deals with local village leaders, ready to be exploited once the moratorium is lifted. By establishing transparent zoning procedures and imposing a “use it, or lose it” tax on speculators, agricultural property can be put to its most productive use, and, with the implementation of the land registry, still protect the property rights of villagers. Traded like any other commodity in a proper manner, land will add value to a villager’s legacy, which is otherwise being beggared by the existing system.

Enforce transparent procedures for the transfer of land from state bodies. The flagrant violation by the Kyiv City Council on Oct. 1 of its own rules, in what has been called the ‘dereban’ of about 3,000 hectares of city property, is a striking example of the need to enforce transparency in the procedures governing the transfers of land title from the state. This includes clarifying, standardizing and unifying the rules and procedures in the Land Code regarding the auctions of land plots (much of which is currently left to the discretion of the local authorities). The foreign ownership restrictions in the Land Code should be scrapped all together as an anachronistic restriction on trade.

The European Cup is therefore an opportunity for Ukraine not just to build scores of new hotels and developments, but to secure the country’s future economic development. Political will is all that is necessary to implement these relatively simple measures. The security and enforceability of property rights will determine whether Ukraine can continue to sustain the dynamics of its current robust economic growth. As our neighbors, Poland, Romania and Russia have found, institutional investors and lenders represent billions of dollars of potential property investment. Along with Ukraine’s increasingly credible banking sector, they can also bring market discipline and create a virtuous cycle of investment involving other areas of the Ukrainian economy. But first investors want to see that the property they purport to own is worth the paper it’s written on. Who gets the title goes way beyond football.