One reason property prices wont fall in Hungary despite the usual desperate sellers is that there is no real house price index like there is in the UK or Ireland, there is no real way of reliably determining property value.
I find this claim rather outlandish. You suggest that a good reason to invest in a market is that it is NOT transparent. Do you wanna by a used car from me. It runs well. Honest. Or maybe some sub-prime mortgage backed securities? I mean really.
Do you have references for this claim?Another good reason to say invested in Budapest is the Euro effect - the increased likelyhood of an early entry will have a profound effect once announced. Just earlier this week there was a long article in the Financial times regarding this - the only way to save the currencies within these countries is to bring them into the Euro early despite the obvious economic problems these countries has. This view is becoming more and more common and I forsee early entry for Hungary.
My search for a Financial Times article you hinted at brought up this one:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/06a45f2a-...uid=ce5d915c-2037-11dd-80b4-000077b07658.html
It is apparently an opinion piece by one commentator, and is no way a statement of official policy or a leak of any impending announcement.
It did mention that adoption of the Euro is mandatory for these countries, because they signed the accession treaty (only UK and Denmark have an opt out clause) but that the EU authorities would have to abandon the existing Euro entry criteria to let them in early.
I wouldn't mind betting that the politicians would demand a price be paid for relaxing the Euro entry rules for Hungary.
What do you think that price would be?
- massive devaluation of the currency perhaps?
- forced austerity measures?
- punitive fiscal changes to balance the budget?
- asset seizures and nationalization?
- tightening of mortgage lending standards?
Again, I doubt that any of these uncertainties would be a good reason to make a new investment in such a market. Investors generally run a mile when they see the threat of government intervention in any market. But maybe I've just read the wrong article.