Find your own slice of heaven in the international real estate market...
Thursday, Feb. 28, 2008
Abruzzo, Italy
Read more about Italy in International Living Postcards—your daily escape
Abruzzo’s landscape isn’t as manicured as Tuscany’s…but it is studded with medieval hill towns, olive groves, and vineyards. No heavyweight art cities to be sure, but what does la dolce vita mean? If it’s relishing good food, a slow-paced lifestyle, and beautiful pastoral landscapes, they’re all here. And for a regular art fix, Rome is only about two hours away.
Read On
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2008
Abruzzo, Italy
Read more about Italy in International Living Postcards—your daily escape
Two hours east of Rome, the Abruzzo region is where southern Italy starts. Fringed by Adriatic beaches, it’s a tapestry of mountains, olive groves, vineyards, and pine forests. Picturesque hill towns come with cobbled streets, small churches, and medieval watchtowers.
Read OnSaturday, Feb. 23, 2008
Read more about international real estate in International Living Postcards—Saturday Edition
Waking up every morning to a view of your own grape vines… The idea has an appeal…especially if someone else is tending the vineyard.
Read OnSaturday, Feb. 16, 2008
Read more about buying foreign real estate in International Living Postcards—Saturday Edition
A fellow investor friend moved to Latin American four years ago and started buying land. The first year he thought he was getting the “local price,” as he was paying only three-quarters what local real estate agents were asking for comparable land. In the second year, he was buying land for about half the agents’ list prices. By the third year, he wasTips paying 60% less than the going Gringo rates.
Read On
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2008
Punta del Este, Uruguay
Read more about investing in foreign real estate in International Living Postcards—your daily escape
High rental returns: that’s why many buyers have entered the Punta del Este real estate market in Uruguay. And with returns sometimes in excess of 10%, it has paid off nicely for them in recent years. What’s more, property investors have seen returns of 30% on their pre-construction investments, according to one Punta del Este real estate firm. But will it continue?
Read On
Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2008
Panama City, Panama
Read more about Panama in International Living Postcards—your daily escape
Sora gets my vote for best place to retire in Panama for three simple reasons:
Read On
Saturday, Feb. 9, 2008
Montevideo, Uruguay
Read more about foreign real estate investing in International Living Postcards—Saturday Edition
The auction was split between two rooms with as many as four properties scheduled every 15 minutes. But there was no sense of urgency...except for one auctioneer, who didn’t spend any time working the crowd and retired his property with no bids. The house was in a bad part of town, but you could have bought it for $6,000 plus the auction costs of $2,000. Still sometimes cheap is cheap for a reason (as Lee Harrison mentioned recently).
Read On