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'Property offers great value'

Jan 20 2009 22:04 Joan Muller and Jade Menezies

Johannesburg - Standard Bank's residential property gauge released on Tuesday shows that its median house price for South Africa came to R592 000 in December 2008, down from around R611 000 12 months earlier.

Standard Bank senior economist Johan Botha says the overall -0.3% drop in 2008 was the first annual decline recorded by Standard Bank since 1996. He adds: "The latest data reflects a very fragile property market."

Botha has little hope of any improvement in housing activity and house price levels anytime soon, despite the prospects of another 250 basis points cut in interest rates. "Clearly, the combination of slow economic growth, punitive debt levels and still high inflation in a general environment of plunging confidence, will continue to impact negatively on many segments of the economy, including the residential property market."

Standard Bank's latest house price figures are roughly in line with that of First National Bank, which recorded a drop of -1.7% in average house prices in December 2007.

Although Absa's figures were still in positive growth territory with a marginal rise of 1% in December 2008, the bank?s senior property analyst Jacques du Toit expects house prices to drop by around -2.5% in 2009.

While falling house prices are, of course, bad news for existing homeowners who now face decreasing property values, it does create buying opportunities for investors. Estate agents say that cash buyers in particular are now in a good position to negotiate sizeable discounts on asking prices.

Andrew Golding, CEO of Pam Golding Properties, says six months ago buyers and sellers were facing an impasse, with sellers being somewhat unrealistic in their expectations. "We are now seeing a definite shift in momentum, with urgent sellers realising they need to adjust their asking prices if they want to offload properties."

Golding says that trend is bringing more bargain buying opportunities to the fore. "It's no longer uncommon for opportunistic buyers to bag properties at offers of 10% to 15% below asking price."

Rael Levitt, CEO of auctioneers Alliance Group, puts it more bluntly: "Investors now have a once-in-a-decade opportunity to accumulate property assets at fantastic values."

Levitt says a flood of residential stock has hit the market since mid-2008, with the values of both forced and non-forced sellers dropping across the board. He expects market weakness to continue well into 2009.

Levitt maintains that in some pockets of the market, notably vacant land and second homes in coastal areas, prices are already 30% to 40% down on a year ago.

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- Fin24.com

 

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(No bad language or hate speech, please)

Agamemnon
Jan 27 2009 16:14 Report this comment

Do you need 999 reasons NOT to stay? http://iluvsa.blogspot.com/ is there for those who believe that SA is the place to be right now. Written by REAL South Africans who expose things that no police officer, no guvmunt official, no newspaper and no TV station will tell you! Get ready as long as you can. ZIM is getting closer every day!
 
Shawn Thaker
Jan 22 2009 09:18 Report this comment

Property would drop between 30% & 50% before there is an upward trend, banks and government because of their greedines has cheated the consumer into buying an asset that is not their fair value, because they forgotten that the community determine the marketvalue of property and not the economist, one of the reasons why the banks of the yanks went bankrupt!!! Greediness...when killing the poor you commit suicide; that is economics
 
James
Jan 21 2009 11:07 Report this comment

I fail to believe that there are bargains in the market. With US house prices tumbling surely SA house prices should follow down South in the next few months. The price differential should have an impact SA house prices...otherwise it surely would be cheaper to buy a home in the US (if possible)
 
John
Jan 21 2009 08:59 Report this comment

When working through an estate agent you need to negotiate sizable discounts as the selling price is inflated with agents commission. When buying or selling privately prices are already deflated and property is sold faster. I'd recommend www.myroof.co.za who offers floor plans with every property and have a free listing promotion for January or www.privateproperty.co.za who've been in the market for ages. By listing online you also reach a much larger market of possible buyers...
 
Nic
Jan 21 2009 08:50 Report this comment

If you take inflation into account it is nearly a 16% fall in the price of property.
 
 
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