Telephone Number Tel: (+34) 952 471 774 | UK Freephone UK Freephone: 0800 047 0597 | US Toll Free US Toll Free: +1-866 656 7152
Home > Spain > Property > News : Bin Ladens Retreats as Spain’s Property Slump Bites
SubscribeSubscribe to the Property Bulletin
   
 
Secure Exit Strategy


Bin Ladens Retreats as Spain’s Property Slump Bites

Article Date :
News Section: Spain        Bookmark on Facebook   Bookmark on Del   Bookmark on Digg   Bookmark on Facebook   Bookmark on Reddit   Bookmark on Spurl   Bookmark on Furl   Bookmark on Yahoo   Bookmark on Magnolia   Bookmark on StumbleUpon   Bookmark on BlinkList

The number of 500 Euro notes in circulation in Spain, known locally as ‘Bin Ladens’, has declined in line with the Spanish property market, suggesting a quirky gauge for measuring activity in the Spanish property market .

Locals call 500 Euro notes ‘Bin Ladens’ because, when the Euro was first introduced, everyone had heard of them, but nobody had actually seen one.

That didn’t last long. At the height of Spain’s property boom, you were far more likely to see a ‘Bin Laden’ in Spain than in any cave on the Afghan-Pakistan border. By last July one quarter of all 500 Euro notes were circulating in Spain, despite Spain issuing fewer of them than any other Eurozone member when the currency was first introduced. Nor does the size of Spain’s economy justify the presence of such a large proportion of the Eurozone’s highest denomination note.

So why so many ‘Bin Ladens’ in Spain? Because corruption in the property sector, along with a popular practise of paying for property with cash under the table, creates a lot of demand for high-denomination notes. ‘Bin Ladens’ make it easier to handle large quantities of cash, converting them into the currency of choice for bent town hall officials, money launderers, organised criminals, and fast buck property speculators, all of whom piled into Spain’s property boom.

But since last July, 4 million ‘Bin Ladens’ have dropped out of circulation in Spain, according to a recent article in the Spanish press. This has coincided with an alarming slump in the Spanish property market, and a government clampdown on town hall corruption. In the absence of reliable Spanish housing market statistics in Spain, you could do worse than look at the number of ‘Bin Ladens’ knocking about. Call it the Spanish property market ‘Bin Laden’ index.

Full story from www.spanishpropertyinsight.com

Like this? Then share with your friends and colleagues!




Article provided by Kyero.com.
Read the full article here:

DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed here are the views of the author of this news item and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of Propertyshowrooms.com.
Listing Separator

Related Articles

  1. Location 'is key' for overseas property buyers
  2. Spanish banks 'need more money' to cover property losses
  3. Purchasers can try Spanish property before they buy
  4. Buying Spanish golf property "a wise move"
  5. Spain to calculate full property exposure



Let us search for you Let Us find Property in Spain for You

Fill out a requirements form and our experts will help you find a great selection of Properties for sale in Spain.


Subscribe to This Feed

RSS News
Subscribe to this RSS Feed
Country: Spain
Channel: All

More RSS FeedsGo

Personal Property Finder
Distressed Sales in Spain

Media/Press SectionProperty News Search


   

News ArchivesNews Archives

View worldwide property news from as far back as 2005 in our News Archives Section.

View News ArchivesGo




Total execution time: 0.0625   (DBA Count: 8)

uri: /news/