Portal Inmobiliarias Punta del Este ║ Immobilienportal Punta del Este ║ Real Estate Portal Punta del Este URUGUAY :: Jose Ignacio - La Barra - Manantiales - Pinares - Punta Ballena - Maldonado :: URUGUAY
CNNMoney: Head to Uruguay, Italy and Malaysia for real estate deals that let you live la dolce vita.
escrito por Business 2.0 Magazine - Michael Copeland
With the U.S. real estate market in the
doldrums, look south - way south - to Uruguay. Uru-where? The tiny
South American nation is wedged between Brazil and Argentina, whose
sputtering currencies have been attracting globe-trotting bargain
hunters in recent years. But it's getting harder to find a real deal in
those countries, with all the competition from euro-flush investors and
increasingly prosperous locals. That makes largely overlooked but
delightfully cosmopolitan Uruguay the place to be. Known as the
Switzerland of South America, Uruguay played host to the jet-setting
crowd in the '60s. These days the likes of Ralph Lauren and Naomi
Campbell hit the beaches of Punta del Este.
Where to buy: Punta developers are cranking out luxury condos
and oceanfront villas that range in price from less than $200,000 to as
much as $5 million. You can still buy a four-bedroom house two blocks
from the beach for $160,000. Go farther up the coast and you can snag
360 acres of ranch land - with lagoon - for $5.8 million.
To be
near the heart of Uruguay's culture and commerce, head to Montevideo.
With its cafes, galleries, and Old World opera house, the city offers
the colonial charm of Buenos Aires without the high prices. The Ciudad
Vieja neighborhood is considered the place with the greatest headroom
for real estate appreciation in the coming years. Bargains abound: A
three-bedroom house for less than $50,000 is not uncommon. Or, for the
price of a Subaru, you can get a two-bedroom apartment with its own
courtyard three blocks from Montevideo's waterfront market.
Bill Reed, a San Francisco-based wholesaler of grass-fed beef, had
previously invested in Argentina but is now busy closing his next
property deal in Uruguay. "The pricing is really good on everything
down there," says Reed, CEO of Estancia Beef. That's the beauty of
Uruguay: Get in for a song now and spend your winters in the sun - or
cash out when it's time to retire.
Making a deal: Buying
Uruguayan real estate is fairly straightforward because foreigners have
the same property rights as locals. The first step is to put down a 10
percent deposit. A lawyer handles the title search and other paperwork.
Expect the process to take more than a month. With local mortgage rates
topping 10 percent, cash is the way to go.
Other bargains:
If Uruguay is not your cup of maté, there are plenty of other places
ripe for real estate appreciation. Calabria, on the toe of Italy's
boot, is where rock-bottom prices meet the Mediterranean sun. A
two-bedroom apartment in the ocean-side town of Scalea can be snapped
up for $83,000. If Southeast Asia is more to your taste, try Malaysia,
with its steamy climate, beaches, and cheap eats. Best of all, you can
still pick up a two-bedroom home in a good part of Kuala Lumpur for
less than $100,000