Monday, June 2, 2008

List of Negative Influences Expanding

More Burden on Property Prices

An article published in Business Report draws attention to growing concern over the ever-lengthening list of negative factors burdening property prices in South Africa. Reserve Bank governor, Tito Mboweni has made hawkish statements to the effect that the market should expect a repo rate hike of 100 basis points this month, which takes the prime interest rate to 16% and there is chance of a yet another hike of 50 basis points in August.

According to First National Bank (FNB), this would push monthly repayments on a R250 000 home loan over 20 years to R3 478 at 16%, from R2 496 in June 2006, when prime was just 10.5%. Property strategist for FNB, John Loos acknowledges that times in the residential property market are “tough”. The list of negative influences continues to expand, including high interest rates, rising inflation, a slowing economy, the National Credit Act, post-Polokwane unease, the Eskom crisis, Zimbabwe’s political dramas, xenophobic violence and low income yields.

Loos said that, “The list has become significantly longer than previously anticipated and especially interest rate hiking has gone further than we had forecast. As a result, a 21% decline in the value of new mortgage loans and re-advances is projected in 2008 and a period of national house price deflation is now forecast”.

Lightstone Risk Management’s national house price index reflects an annual property inflation drop to 7.8% in April, which is half a percentage point lower than in March and significantly lower than the rate of 14% in April 2007. Lightstone reported that higher value areas seem to be performing the worst and may have moved closer to zero or even negative nominal growth. Furthermore, house price inflation appears to be declining the fastest in smaller provincial markets.

According to the index, “Although nominal house price inflation is still positive, one major difference from last year is the decline in real house price inflation (adjusting for consumer price inflation). Currently, real house price inflation is around –3%, which is significantly down from last year when real house price inflation was 7%”.

Based on external economic forecasts involving factors such as domestic product growth, consumer inflation, disposable income growth and debt service ratios, Lightstone expected the downward trend in national house price inflation to continue and bottom out towards the middle of 2009. There is still a good chance that the low point for national nominal house price inflation will remain positive, although in some segments house prices are likely to decline even more.

In the analysis for January, Lightstone’s indication of national inflation came in at 9.2%. The high value segment, which includes properties priced between R1.5m and R750 000, continued its steep decline, dropping to 6.4%, while the more affordable sector (less than R250 000) continued to outdo the other segments and reached inflation of 24.3%.

As far as freehold property price inflation was concerned, it continued to outperform sectional titles by 3 percentage points. In January, a drop to 10.8% inflation was reported for freehold against 8% for sectional titles. Provincial growth performance in Gauteng for January reached 8.5%, which is lower than any of the other major provinces. The Eastern Cape performed best, with prices increasing by 9.7%.

The growth in coastal property prices, Lightstone found had shown surprising strength until the end of last year, but took a sharp downturn in January, dipping 2.7 percentage points to 8.5%. Growth fell back below non-coastal inflation, which came in at 9.4%,

The information in this article is courtesy of Wiseman Khuzwayo (“Growing list of negative factors burdens property prices”, Business Report, 1 June 2008).

If you would like to buy or sell property in South Africa, please visit www.sahometraders.co.za.

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