PROPERTY
NEWS HEADLINES
2012 Apr 29 - Solid Future for Property Market
With South African consumers having experienced some of the most
interesting times in economic history, it would be easy to think that
battle-weary buyers may hesitate to enter the property market. However,
it seems that the opposite may be true as figures show an increase in
the average residential demand rating among consumers in the recent
months.
Those who have worked in the property industry or have invested in the
market have been in the front row seats to the most fascinating economic
events we have seen during modern times. We have seen the market yield
some amazing returns during the boom with years of rising property
prices, then the sub-prime crisis and then what has been dubbed as the
Great Recession. Now we are in a recovery stage and many opportunities
have opened up in the market for buyers who were previously unable to
afford property.
Generally sentiment among buyers has become more positive, which can be
seen in the higher demand for residential property as well as the
marginal growth in the real house price index. According to the latest
House Price Index (HPI) report by First National Bank's (FNB) Household
and Property Sector Strategist John Loos, the recent moderate
improvement in the house price growth is partly a result of late real
economic growth in 2011. Compared with price levels at the inception of
the FNB HPI back in July 2000, real prices were 69.4% higher as at
February 2012, while nominal prices were 226.8% higher as at March 2012.
Loos says that with interest rate cuts starting as far back as December
2008 and consumers becoming accustomed to low and stable interest rates,
lender and borrowing household's behaviour has become more pro-cyclical
and the bad events of the 2008/9 recession and interest rate peaks are
becoming nothing more than distant memories. As bad events fade into the
past, consumer confidence continues to grow as their perception of risk
improves.
During 2009 many economists predicted that the two years that would
follow would be fairly steady and the market would be expected to see a
greater recovery during 2012. While not all global property sectors have
seen a marked increase in the rate of recovery, the South African
market has seen more first-time buyers and investor interest during 2011
and so far in 2012. Although 2012 is not expected to yield spectacular
results, positive consumer sentiment is growing among homeowners and the
market continues to reflect this in its continually increasing
transaction volumes. The South African market has continued to move from
strength to strength with improved property sales figures year-on-year.
If South African consumers were pessimistic about the market in the
past, it is not holding them back from wanting to buy property now.
Numerous local buyers have returned to the market and are
taking up the opportunities that have presented themselves. While some
still err on the side of caution and believe that house prices will
continue to feel the pressure for a while longer, aales figures for the first two months of the year
are already substantially up on the same period in 2011. There are also reports
that there is a decrease in supply, which is positive in improving the
market balance. The FNB Market Strength Index, which represents the
demand rating minus the supply rating, moved up from a revised 44.9 in
February to 45.2 in March.
Despite the property slump, homeowners in South Africa who have owned
their property for over 15 years will have experienced extraordinary
house price growth compared with those who purchased their house in the
past five years. However, those who hold onto their property will once
again see a growth in the price of their home in years to come.
According to FNB, the average house price growth for 2012 is expected to
be around 6%, compared to 3.2% achieved in 2011.
Based on the property cycle of the past 25 years, expectations are that
the property market will continue to recover both globally and locally.
It is during this period of recovery that buyers will find the best
property investment opportunities before the beginning of the next boom
cycle,
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