Housing: DBRS thinks the price surge will slow — and explains why
Rating agency DBRS expects a gradual brake on Portugal's house-price climb if immigration falls, inflation rises and credit tightens.
Good news for would-be buyers? Maybe. Rating agency DBRS has said the runaway rise in Portuguese house prices should lose steam in the coming period. Before the champagne, it’s worth understanding the “why” — because it has thorns.
Recall the starting point: house prices climbed 10.2% over the past year, to a fresh record of 3,142 euros per square metre. That pace can’t last forever, and DBRS points to three brakes coming into play.
The three brakes
The first is immigration. Fewer people arriving means less demand for housing, and demand has been one of the great engines of prices. The second is inflation, which erodes disposable income and leaves less room for a mortgage payment. The third is tighter credit — with rates and bank requirements filtering who can actually buy.
Note the irony: the slowdown wouldn’t come from more homes being built (what everyone wants), but mainly from fewer people able to buy. It’s relief from the wrong side of the equation.
What it means for you
Slowing isn’t falling. DBRS talks about slower growth, not a price drop or a bursting bubble — indeed, several experts insist Portugal has a housing crisis, but not a bubble. Anyone waiting for a crash to get into the market could be waiting a very long time.
The honest read: the rocket may become an aeroplane, but it’s still climbing. Building more homes is what would truly change the game.
Illustrative · Photo: Jakub Zerdzicki / Pexels