Global housing prices on the rise

Monaco may top the charts as the most expensive place to buy in the world, but other countries are also seeing astronomical rises in the cost of property, making obtaining a little slice of heaven that much more out of reach for the average buyer.

In 2021, house prices rose in 49 of the 56 world housing markets that publish statistics, showing huge jumps in what it takes to buy a property.

The home price boom is slightly deceptive in that many figures don’t take inflation into account. When this aspect is considered, the number of countries that saw jumps in prices falls to 38 out of 56, still a considerable number.

The strongest housing markets of 2021, as shown by a global house price survey done by Global Property Guide, included Australia, which saw a massive +17.57% leap, Turkey with an equally big +17.27% rise, Slovak Republic, which rose +15.71%, New Zealand at +14.66%, and Jersey, which was up +14.06% using inflation adjusted figures.

Australia’s phenomenal housing market growth has been fuelled by high demand coupled with low inventory levels in the country’s eight major cities. This is a big leap up from the previous year’s 3.87% rise.

As for year-on-year decreases, Morocco saw the most dramatic drops, falling -10.54% followed by the Philippines with a -9.81% drop, Sri Lanka with -9.6%, Peru with -8.86% and Italy coming in at -6.62%, again using inflation adjustment figures.

Europe’s housing market continues to be strong, despite the economic strain caused by the pandemic. Housing prices have risen in 21 of the 27 European markets whose statistics are available for 2021. Three of the five strongest housing markets in the global survey are European nations.

Other than the three previously mentioned countries – Turkey, Slovak Republic and Jersey – housing price booms are also evident in the Netherlands, with the average purchase price rising by +13.83% in 2021, almost double the +7.33% of the previous year.

Germany also saw a healthy market in 2021, with the price of flats rising by +7.04% on average. The UK also saw a +5.5% rise, on par with the country’s previous year, though it was notably flat in London, whilst the rest of the country saw rises. This can partially be explained by the government decision to have a transaction tax holiday on stamp duty to allow homebuyers affected by the Covid crisis to buy.

Sweden, Lithuania, Iceland, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Portugal, Romania and Ireland also saw appreciable growth. France saw a more modest rise of +4.27% brought on by renewed optimism in the last quarter of 2021.

The Pacific has seen massive growth, with Australia’s being record-breaking. The North American market is still booming as well, with double digit house price growth. Asian markets are seeing a ramping up, whilst the Middle East is a mixed bag and Latin America continues to struggle.

In general, the news is positive, but for those already struggling to pay rent, the prospects of purchasing are becoming increasingly out of reach. Affordability was a growing problem before the start of the pandemic, and the crisis did nothing to help.

People wanting to flee small flats during lockdowns coupled with decreased construction created an environment ripe for price increases. But for many, household incomes stayed stagnant, were cut completely, or were affected by inflation. The idea of home ownership for many flew out of the window, making for a continental divide that may continue for generations.

As a result, young and lower-income people despair they will ever be able to save enough to get on the property ladder. They may be right.

 

 

Photo by Maximillian Conacher on Unsplash

 

 

 

Remarkable Monaco women gather for International Women’s Day

The 3rd edition of the Women of Monaco Lunch brought together 60 remarkable women from different countries, fields and backgrounds to celebrate the passing of International Women’s Day at the Monaco Yacht Club.

The guest list reads like a who’s who of the Principality, with the enduringly chic Princess Caroline, model Victoria Silvstedt, businesswoman and filmmaker Lady Monika Bacardi, Elisabetta Gregoraci, and Princess Antonella of Orleans-Bourbon amongst a cast of glittering and accomplished women meeting up for a luncheon organised by 5 Star Events on 8th March at the Monaco Yacht Club.

Sixty women in all came together for International Women’s Day and were recognised for their collective and individual achievements and giving special notice to those who have gone above and beyond through the awarding of the Women of Monaco Award.

This year, there were five winners starting with Rita Caltigirone-Rovelli in the Art and Culture category for her Monaco Project for the Arts, a non-profit association supporting arts and education. Under the Charity heading was Donatella Campioni for her work as President of Monaco Aide and Presence, which carries out humanitarian and charitable actions around the globe with special emphasis on children in need. The Image Award went to model Victoria Silvstedt, who has spent a lifetime cultivating her talents in the fields of acting and singing. Lady Monika Bacardi was honoured with the Entrepreneur Award for her many endeavours in the world of film, business and art patronage. And Oxana Girko won the Green Award in recognition of her last international project to reduce plastic pollution on the planet by creating a new formula of plastic that dissolves after use.

The theme of the lunch was Capri, which tied in beautifully with creations by Maison Chantecler Capri and was attended by CMS Monaco Christine Pasquier-Ciuilla, a founder of the prestigious family law firm.

The event was rounded out with a hint of what’s to come in spring trends, with a fashion show put on by stylist Oscar Scirè.

 

Photo from left to right: Oxana Girko, Monica Landeau, H.R.H Princess Caroline of Hanover (President of the Princess Grace Foundation), Sandrine Knoell (organizer of the Women of Monaco Lunch), Elisabetta Gregoraci, Victoria Silvstedt.

 

New Northbound Exhibition at the Oceanographic Museum

Visitors to the Oceanographic Museum are invited to journey from Föhr in Northern Germany to the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway in an exciting new exhibition that reveals the beauty of the North Sea and the importance of preserving its coastal and marine areas.

The Museum Kunst der Westküste, located in Alkersum on the North Sea island of Föhr, Germany, is presenting the ‘Northbound. Connected by the Sea’ exhibition at the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco from 19th March to 19th June 2022. It brings together 24 paintings and photographs, historical and contemporary works which illustrate the role of the North Sea and the importance of preserving its coastal and marine areas. The Northbound exhibition, scheduled as part of Monaco Ocean Week, will be complemented by a scientific symposium entitled ‘The North Sea, a Sea of Solutions’, on 11th May 2022.

The North Sea, a shelf sea in Northwestern Europe, is revealed through an exclusive selection of paintings and photographs from the collection of the Museum Kunst der Westküste, providing exhibition visitors with a visual voyage across four ports of call.

First stop is the Netherlands, where artworks such as Cool Early Spring on Scheveningen Pier by Isaac Israëls (1865–1934) is characterised by a warm grey-blue tone. The tour then heads to Denmark where the Skagen Painters, a group of Scandinavian artists who gathered in the village of Skagen in the northernmost part of Denmark, captured in their compositions the famous ‘blue hour’ specific to Danish outdoor painting since the 1880s. These atmospheric conditions are characteristic of Peder Severin Krøyers (1851-1909) renderings of Skagens beaches, such as Fishermen on the Beach at Skagen, Mild Summer Evening or Anna Ancher and Marie Krøyer on the Beach at Skagen – a work loaned by the Broere Charitable Foundation, a patron of the Oceanographic Institute.

Joakim Eskildsen, Skagen VI, 2008 © Museum Kunst der Westküste

Contemporary artists are perpetuating this tradition by capturing in their photographs the twilight of ‘blue hour’, as seen in Skagen VI (2008) by Joakim Eskildsen.

In Norway, landscapes are romantic and emotive in conception, as seen in A Norwegian Fjord in Summer by Georg Anton Rasmussen (1842-1914).

Finally, the journey highlights the wonderful island of Föhr in North Frisia (Germany), with its special cultural and scenic features. The seascape of Otto H. Engel (1866-1949) makes Frisian culture around 1900 very vivid, whether through pictorial figures as in Evening Beach Scene, the interior of Frisian houses as in Frisian Parlour, or portrait painting as in In Front of the Mirror, which shows a woman from Föhr wearing traditional costume and readjusting her embroidered headscarf.

All the works presented have a common denominator: the sea. For centuries artists have challenged themselves to ‘capture’ this subject, which never stands still. In constant motion, the sea changes continually in its overall appearance, its colours, its temperament. At times the sea captivates by its calm, smooth, reflective surface. At times it is immersed in green, blue or sometimes grey, interspersed with white crests formed by the waves.

Laurits Tuxen, Fresh Day in June on Skagen, 1908 © Museum Kunst der Westküste

By creating a dialogue between historical and contemporary artworks, the Northbound exhibition is inviting visitors to explore the role played by the North Sea throughout history. The exhibition also highlights the role the North Sea played and continues to play in the cultural links between the island of Föhr, Northern Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands and Norway. These regions are also linked by the threat posed by climate change, pollution and overfishing. By letting visitors appreciate the beauties and characteristics of the North Sea region, the aim is to draw their attention to the importance of protecting coasts and encourage as many people as possible to have a responsible attitude towards nature.

Guided tours of the exhibition will be offered during school holidays as well as a treasure hunt, accessible online, for schoolchildren and their parents.

The exhibition will be complemented by a scientific symposium open to the public. It will address, using a comparative approach, the challenges to be met as well as exemplary experiments carried out for the protection of the environment for the North Sea and the Mediterranean. This meeting will be led by Peter Herzig, former director of the GEOMAR Institute.

 

Top photo: Georg Anton Rasmussen, A Norwegian Fjord in Summer, n.d. © Museum Kunst der Westküste, Photo Lukas Spörl

 

 

 

Spring is in the air at the Monte-Carlo Spring Arts Festival

Welcome the return to warm days and sunshine with the Monte-Carlo Spring Arts Festival, the theme ‘My End is My Beginning’ perfectly representing what is in store at this decidedly modern event.

As the days grow longer and nature begins her wondrous renewal dance, so too does the Principality at the 2022 Monte-Carlo Spring Arts Festival.

Cinema, art, and dance all join together, creating moments of beauty and wonder for audiences and guests to enjoy.

Under the theme ‘My End is My Beginning’, chosen by the event’s new artistic director Bruno Mantovani, the programme, as well as the lectures and roundtable events, will offer insight into the idea that when one creative period ends, another often starts. This will be portrayed in myriad ways, whether it be through the identity of Russian music or writing for string quartets.

Additionally, Armenia is in the spotlight for this year’s event, and will be celebrated with a series of concerts that showcase the artistic vitality of a country that has just the right blend of tradition and modernity.

The works of artist Sergei Parajanov will be featured in an exhibit and his film, Sayat Nova, will be screened. The ballet Sept, les anges du Sinjar, composed by Aram Hovhannisyan and Michel Petrossian and choreographed by Michel Hallet-Eghayan, will enlighten people to the plight of the Yazidi culture, which has been persecuted over the centuries and still faces the same trials today.

Some of the concerts will be followed by “salons” where artists and audiences talk about the music, shared in an intimate setting.

The Monte-Carlo Spring Arts Festival runs from 10th March to 3rd April and a full listing of the events, times and places can be found on their website at https://www.printempsdesarts.mc/programme

 

 

Monaco Boost now open to entrepreneurial spouses

The government-backed business incubator Monaco Boost has put out its latest call for applications, and this time spouses of Monegasque nationals are allowed to apply.

Monaco Boost was launched by the Prince’s Government early 2021 to support emerging Monegasque companies through a workspace and various incubator advantages such as networking, meetings, workshops and training on various topics related to the world of business.

On Monday 14th March, it launched a 4th call for applications, as published in the Journal de Monaco on Friday 11th March 2022, but the scope of applicable start-ups has been widened.

“This call is now open to Monegasque spouses wishing to create a new activity. They will therefore be able to benefit from a workspace and all the advantages of the incubator for a maximum period of three years, the conditions for candidates of Monegasque nationality remaining unchanged,” said the government in a statement.

Interested persons must submit an application file before 22nd April 2022. The applications will then be examined by a committee chaired by Minister of Finance and Economy Jean Castellini and composed of National Council, Administration and Monaco Boost representatives.

Monaco Boost is currently supporting 26 activities.

 

 

Photo by Stéphane Danna, Government Communication Department

 

 

 

Looking at Monaco with ‘Ma Vie en Rose’ coloured glasses

The Monte-Carlo Société des Bains de Mer is marking the return of spring with two months of celebratory events under the theme ‘My Life in Pink’.

Spring is about to be sprung and people everywhere are coming out of their winter cocoons, ready to head outdoors to enjoy all that this season of beauty and rebirth has to offer.

The Monte-Carlo Société des Bains de Mer (SBM) is no exception, and they have put together a roster of creative, musical, gastronomic and festive experiences from 8th March to 8th May, calling it Ma Vie en Rose(My Life in Pink) after the song made famous by legendary French singer Edith Piaf.

Amongst the highlights are an artistic exhibit from 8th March entitled ‘Rose is Art’.  Imagined by Eva Dmitrenko and Céline Pagès, young artists from the Pavillon Bosio Art School, ‘Roses of the Winds’ will bloom from the Hotel Hermitage to One Monte-Carlo and in the Jardins des Boulingrins and as far as the Allée François Blanc.

The patio of the Hôtel de Paris will be covered in sweet-smelling magnolias and a Ma Vie en Rose selfie spot will be set up in the atrium of the Casino.

Next up will be a delight made more for the palate than the olfactory. Michelin-star Chef Marcel Ravin will host the ‘Rose is the Future’ Grand Dinner on 30th April at the Monte-Carlo Bay Hotel & Resort. The evening promises to combine “joie de vivre and modernity for a totally extraordinary evening.

Not to be outdone, the Hôtel Hermitage will be putting on a ‘Rose is Rosé’ event on 7th May. This wine tasting conference, sponsored by Moët & Hennessey-LMVH, will feature wines from top wine makers such as Château d’Esclans, Garrus, Château du Galoupet, Le Chant des Cigales, and Armand de Brignac champagne.

For the festive touch, from 8th March, there’s the ‘Rose is White’ at the Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo which will celebrate Marie Blanc, the great designer. During this “pink period”, the Bar Américain will celebrate in images and music of great women.

Music and the arts will also be honoured at the Hôtel Hermitage Monte-Carlo where they will welcome musicians and the public to the Printemps des Arts at the Crystal Bar for intimate musical after-parties. On 3rd April, after a concert by Renaud Capuçon in the afternoon, a dinner will be given in the Salle Belle Epoque, punctuated by musical interludes by the artists present.

On 7th May, burlesque star Dita Von Teese will perform her latest revue, Glamonatrix, taking the public on a journey to the erotic at the Opéra Garnier.

The fun doesn’t end there. There are several other events planned, such as magic workshops for kids every Saturday during the period at the Monte Carlo Bay Hotel & Resort, Sunday Brunch and The Kids Room at Hôtel Hermitage every Sunday, plus tennis lessons with pro players, Padel tennis, Easter egg hunts, and Earth Hour on the Place du Casino.

Finally, a ‘Ma Vie en Rose Grand Game’ will be organised at the Casino de Monte-Carlo and the Casino Café de Paris for all members of the loyalty program My Monte-Carlo with more than 40 prizes to be won with a total value of €30,000 euros.

 

 

Photo source: Monte-Carlo SBM