This is a good question and one that I am sure is on the minds of a lot of people who are considering buying property here. If you are looking at Costa Rica property as an investment, the question is will we continue to see good appreciation in the next 5-10 years or will the Costa Rica market slow down with the U.S. market.
At the heart of the matter is the question of whether people who are buying or will buy property here in Costa Rica are the same demographic as those taking out sub-prime loans, 100% loans or interest only balloon notes.
I read some interesting items lately about this issue:
Dana Blankhorn at A-clue.com wrote on
The Falling Knife of Housing. I gather from this article that the falling market is due to rash loans by the banks, that were made to bad credit risks, first time home buyers. Also, people refinancing and counting on the value of their house to rise 10% to 20% per year over a five year period.
The BBC web site has some good articles on the sub-prime market and the US market in general.
This article
Sub-prime firm sells $2.7bn loans stated that "Sub-prime lenders provide money to clients with a poor credit history, and the current problems have been sparked by a rise in defaults and bad loans." Also that the defaults were triggered by constantly rising interest rates over the last 4 years.
The BBC offers this
Q&A: Sub-prime lending on the sub prime issue.
Our group had a meeting in March and we discussed the possibility of US real estate bubble bursting and what effect it might have on the Costa Rica market. In general our brokers believe that the markets are not too closely tied, most of our clients are people buying second homes or down sizing, so while they might not see appreciation on their U.S. properties in a slow market, they are not relying on that appreciation to buy property here.
In the current case it is clear that our clients are not fitting this profile from the BBC Q & A: "What is sub-prime lending? - Put simply, it is loans to people who have patchy credit histories or cannot prove their incomes."
So it seems that Costa Rica will continue to be a good place to invest in real estate in the near future, since the growth here is driven by infrastructure development and strong demand in the areas that our group covers.