Saturday, October 5, 2013

In Kenya, owning a house remains a fantasy for most



High mortgage rates and rising prices lock out most potential buyers. FILE
High mortgage rates and rising prices lock out most potential buyers. FILE 
By STEVE MBOGO Special Correspondent
In Summary
  • Real estate analysts and economists are warning that house prices will continue to rise as lenders shy away from the business, worsening a crippling housing crisis.
  • Faltering capacity among private developers to execute well-done projects at a reasonable cost, is emerging a big concern not only in Kenya, but the entire East African region.
  • The lack of innovative mortgage financing solutions means that even companies that specialise in developing cheaper houses require their clients to source financing independently.

The high demand for formal housing in Kenya is fuelling price hikes, locking out potential buyers and denying the sector funds to reinvest in order to increase supply.

Real estate analysts and economists are warning that house prices will continue to rise as lenders shy away from the business, worsening a crippling housing crisis.

A new report by the African Development Bank (AfDB), notes that high prices have locked Kenya’s housing sector out of faster growth.

With only a handful of private developers in the country who can afford to invest in medium to large scale developments of 200 units and above, targeting the middle to low income segments, the AfDB is warning of worsening supply gaps.

According to the Centre for Affordable Housing Finance in Africa, the annual increase in the demand for housing in Kenya is 206,000 units, of which 82,000 are in urban areas.

Skills gap
Faltering capacity among private developers to execute well-done projects at a reasonable cost, is emerging a big concern not only in Kenya, but the entire East African region.

With the exception of Zambia and to some extent Tanzania, many developers lack experience, according to AfDB. In Uganda, they tend to have no more than three years of experience; whereas in Kenya where they average 5.5 years, developers are able to put up large developments of 200 to 250 units.

The average size of a home loan in Kenya has risen to Ksh6.4 million ($75,294) over the past two years, from around Ksh5 million ($58,823), latest data from the Central Bank of Kenya shows. But while the average formal house is cheaper in Kenya than in South Africa, Uganda and Zambia, the lack of innovative financing options and high interest on mortgages remain a challenge.

“At prevailing interest rates on mortgages, affordability remains a key constraint,” said Yannis Arvanitis, a research economist at the AfDB and author of the report, African Housing Dynamics: Lessons from the Kenyan Market. Interest rates on home loans currently oscillate between 11 per cent and 25 per cent. This means that the borrower of say a Ksh6.4 million ($75,294) 15-year house loan at 18 per cent, will end up paying Ksh17.3 million ($203,520).

While about 80 per cent of new houses target high and upper middle income earners, the AfDB report shows the greatest demand, estimated at 83 per cent, is among low and lower middle income earners.
According to property firm HassConsult, this state of affairs has meant that 80 per cent of Kenyans living in urban areas do not live in their own houses.
The bigger challenge comes in when the 80 per cent of urban dwellers living in rented houses have to contend with fast rising rent. Since 2001, rent in major urban centres has increased 2.99 times. It means that a house that fetched say Ksh10,000 ($117) in 2001, now costs Ksh30,000 ($352) per month in rent. In the past one year alone to April 2013, rents rose by 12.6 per cent, according to Hass Consult.

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