I thought about buying property here about 4 years ago. What worried me at the time was once i was in the country as an investor was being able to easily move to another country and to liquidate the investment.
If the price was cheap enough, that would offset some of the risk, but i didnt think it was cheap enough for the risk.
Just the hassle of having to sell a house in US$, then convert to pesos to transfer out of the country via a bank and then taking another hit on the conversion again from pesos to US$ or NZ$ or AU$ put me off - there was a 10% hit at least after all costs.
My thoughts were once i was an investor here, the chances of being a captive investor in this country was to great a risk for me to take with the lifestyle i have - moving around alot.
If i was thinking of staying here long term, for reasons like arg wife/kids etc, that is a whole different story. The value of a house will be in relationship to the cost of living and incomes.
It is like buying a property in NZ. The NZ$ is one of the 8 most traded currencies in the world, in one of the most open economies in the world, with no restrictions on buying or selling the NZ$, however we are such a small economy, just one large company wanting to buy or sell NZ$ can effect the NZ$. An example of this is in the last 2 weeks, it has gone from US$0.83 to US$0.75, now today i see its on the way back up again and now US$0.76. Next week it could be US$0.80 or US$0.70.
These are big swings in a sort space of time, so if you are an overseas investor you dont know what will happen, you could have purchased a house 2 weeks ago and now sitting on more than a 10% loss in US$ terms. But if you buy in for the long term you will probably end up with an ok return on investment.
So for everyone who has purchased here, your house maybe be worth 1/2 of todays value next year, but in 5 or 10 years it might be worth twice that. In a country like argentina there is a huge risk - if you look at the past you can pretty much get an idea of the future. But there can also be a big upside. And if you look at what investments options there are here, property is pretty much it for the average person. So there will always be demand.
I dont think there is going to be any big drop in house prices - maybe 20%, unless there is a large rise in unemployment. The downside is going to be caused by inflation and the value of the peso. So prices will be trying to keep up.
If I had property here, i would sit and wait it out. The main reason being getting the sale money into a hard currency because its anyones guess what is going to happen with the peso. We could wake up tomorrow with the news that the peso has been devalued by 30%.
However if you can sell your house in US$ and get the money out of the country, i would take it and run for the exit !!!