1/20: Mexico housing boom to offset layoffs?
January 20, 2008
Maybe a reverse immigration trend in the offing?
Long thrashed by swings in the U.S. economy, Mexico now boasts a thriving housing sector whose record growth leads Latin America – a sign of increased economic stability, and an outlet for investors looking to escape the U.S. downturn.
Giants including the California Public Employees Retirement System, the largest U.S. public pension fund, are already bankrolling projects in Mexico, where they see “more bang for the buck,” said Clark McKinley, spokesman for CalPERS, which has invested more than $300 million in Mexican real estate funds.
The trend could even slow emigration from Mexico, by generating millions in jobs and personal savings as a fresh supply of loans gives many their first chance to own a house.
President Felipe Calderon has set a national goal of a million new mortgages a year by 2010. On Monday, he unveils a set of measures to ensure growth continues, with plans to boost Mexico’s small resale market and combat the urban sprawl that has begun to carpet valleys with hundreds of thousands of matchbox rowhomes.
Behind the boom are six years of economic growth and stability, and a national shortage of 6 million dwellings. While interest rates are falling, just 6 percent of Mexico’s 25.7 million homes are financed with mortgages – compared to about 67 percent in the U.S. Most Mexicans still inherit their homes, buy them with cash, or build them by hand.
Entry Filed under: Construction. Tags: Construction, housing, housing jobs, Mexico, Mortgage, Subprime.
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Lou Ceballos | January 20, 2008 at 11:07 pm
I agree with you. I go to Mexico very often for business and travel purposes. I see a housing boom as never before. What I would have to add to your post is that Mexican Immigrants in the US save money to build houses back in their hometowns, and that’s even rushing the housing situation.
Keep up the good blogging.
Lou, Host of Official Mexico Guide Podcast