Property prices: 'you ain't seen
nothing yet'
Various supply and demand factors should ensure that property prices
continue to rise.
November 4, 2006
By Laura du Preez
Accelerating long-term economic growth in South Africa will stimulate
the demand for property, while building capacity constraints will
result in a shortage of supply, John Loos, a property strategist
at First National Bank, told a recent property investment conference
hosted by the Investment Property Databank (IPD) and the South African
Property Owners' Association.
If you think property is expensive now, "you ain't seen nothing
yet", Loos says.
Periods of accelerating long-term economic growth, driven by structural
change, are generally times of under-forecasting during which market
booms exceed expectations, he says.
Loos says he was asked to comment on how six-percent growth in
South Africa's gross domestic product (GDP) would affect property,
but he does not expect the country's economic growth to achieve
that level until early in the next decade.
However, he says, when projecting the performance of property,
the rate of growth in the economy is arguably less important than
its direction - and currently growth is accelerating rather than
decelerating over the long term.
The direction is important because if a country comes off a low
growth base, the construction sector lacks the capacity to provide
property at an increasing pace.
After a very long slump in the construction industry during the
1980s and 1990s, there is limited capacity to keep up with the growing
demand for property, Loos says.
The building and construction sector has been accustomed to economic
growth of about nought to two percent, he says. Mounting material
and skills shortages, as a result of considerably faster growth,
are expected to drive double-digit inflation in building costs.
Major infrastructural projects planned by the government and for
the 2010 World Cup will also cause building costs to escalate.
Building cost inflation is expected to drive up property prices,
including the price of residential property. As a result, Loos says,
the currently slowing residential property market has yet to see
an end to the good days.
He expects a recovery in the residential property market in 2008,
as he anticipates that by then interest rates will be decreasing
again, to a turning point below last year's prime rate low of 10.5
percent
In addition, Loos says, the growth in residential property spending
among the emerging black middle class may out-pace the GDP growth
rate. This is because as households move into higher-income categories
they tend to increase the portion of their budgets that they spend
on property.
For instance, on average, households in Randburg spend an estimated
12 percent of their total expenditure on accommodation, while households
in Soweto, with a far lower per capita income, spend on average
only 7.7 percent.
Loos forecasts residential property prices to have risen by the
end of 2010 by an average 85 percent on their prices at the end
of last year.
Although this is not nearly as impressive as the approximately
230-percent rise in property prices between the end of 1998 and
the end of 2005, he says it will still be a significant increase.
Constraints in the construction industry have a lot to do with
the current bullish views on commercial property, Loos says.
Already there is a mounting scarcity of commercial space, he says.
The best-performing sub-sectors of commercial property last year
were retail and industrial, with average total returns of 33 percent
and 33.1 percent respectively.
The office sector has been lagging (24.5-percent total return last
year), Loos says, but is expected to accelerate towards a 30-percent
return in the year ahead.
The vacancy rates of the different types of commercial property
have been declining since 2002 and show little sign of increasing
despite the fact that there has been significant building activity,
he says.
This indicates that we are probably some way from an oversupply
of commercial property, he says.
In industrial property, Loos says, low vacancy rates are driving
strong rental inflation, with reports of year-on-year increases
of between 12.6 percent and 42 percent. He says office rentals are
also accelerating, with reports of rental inflation as high as 15
percent last year.
Loos says further acceleration in economic growth and constraints
on the supply of property could result in average double-digit rental
inflation for industrial and retail property by early next decade.
If commercial property rentals increase at an average rate of 10
percent a year, which is not unreasonable in an economy that is
growing at a real rate of four to five percent, by 2015 rentals
will have risen by 159 percent of 2005's values, he says.
In addition to building supply constraints, Loos says the scarcity
of land in metropolitan areas will become more problematic in the
years to come and will impact positively on the price of property.
Loos says that because economic growth is accelerating, you can
expect the upswings in property prices to be longer and more extreme,
and the downturns to be shorter and milder compared with those in
the 1980s and 1990s, when the economy was stagnating.
So, although there has already been a long upswing in property
prices, you shouldn't expect a sustained downturn yet, Loos says.
He says people tend to base their expectations for property on
what happened in the 1980s and 1990s. It would probably be
better to look back to the 1960s as a benchmark for property
performance in an economy that is growing more rapidly.
(Persfin,
November 4, 2006)
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