Workingman wrote:I suppose that all she and others, including Cypriots, can do is sit it out till things improve.
Good luck with that. It's 5 years in France now since prices started falling. There are a few sales but most are between 25% and 40% of the value they would have gained at the peak. It takes time for markets to adjust. Especially markets that move very slowly and are very conservative. In the end it may be the builders selling off at near cost who finally drive the prices down.
But if there are truly 250,000 properties empty, then I can see no way that Cyprus can survive this in their current form. Eventually they will wind up having to sell at whatever someone is willing to buy and that someone will probably be a very large conglomerate looking for a long term investment. In the end that conglomerate will wind up with a very large monopoly in Cypriot reel estate.
I doubt the Cypriots even understand what is going to happen to them. Yet they all want to stay in the Euro, they see it as their saviour...
The only people they are kidding are themselves. They fought to get out of British rule, only to lose half the island to the Turks. Now it seems that they are going to lose what is left to the ECB, France and Germany....
And we think our politicians are bad... Although, apparently, we're willing to throw it all away too on the EU, if not the Euro....