Ms Sakina Hassanali, Hass Consult head of marketing and research. FILE
By John Gachiri,
In Summary
- The Hass Property Index 2013 shows that the average sales price for housing units in Nairobi’s main suburbs stagnated in 2013 and in some cases dipped due to low demand.
- The index shows that the average price for a house in one of Nairobi’s middle to high-end suburbs marginally increased by 0.3 per cent to Sh24,184,047 in 2013 from Sh24,102,406 in 2012.
- In the last three months of the year alone the average price for a house in the main suburbs dropped by 1.3 per cent.
Kenya’s high-end and middle-income housing market is showing signs of flattening after years of strong growth.
The Hass Property Index 2013 released Thursday
shows that the average sales price for housing units in Nairobi’s main
suburbs stagnated in 2013 and in some cases dipped due to low demand.
The index, jointly compiled by Hass Consult and
The Mortgage Company (TMC) Africa, shows that the average price for a
house in one of Nairobi’s middle to high-end suburbs marginally
increased by 0.3 per cent to Sh24,184,047 in 2013 from Sh24,102,406 in
2012.
In the last three months of the year alone the average price for a house in the main suburbs dropped by 1.3 per cent.
“We have witnessed marked slowdowns in some of our
suburbs as high prices have seen Kenyans search for competitive and
more fashionable locations. Suburbs such as Muthaiga, Langata and
Brookside have seen property prices experience marginal falls,” said
Hass Consult head of marketing and research Sakina Hassanali at a press
briefing.
The survey found that in the last quarter of 2013,
the average house in the upmarket Muthaiga suburb cost Sh62.1 million,
down from Sh65 million in a similar quarter a year earlier.
Hass Consult also found that there is low demand
from first-time buyers which is having an effect on the rental market,
especially for town houses which recorded the highest increase in rent
last year.
The main tenants of these houses are families that would ordinarily buy a house but due to high cost of finance opt to rent.
“With typical first-time buyers simply unable to
reach the financing costs of mortgages, we are now seeing a
concentration of the middle classes into Town renting, causing a surge
in rents across the mid-level of the property market,” said Ms
Hassanali
.
.
The average rent for a town house increased by 19.4 per cent to Sh127,724 from Sh106,000 in 2013.
Property financiers say mortgages are still high
despite the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) having held steady the
benchmark rate at 8.5 per cent since mid-last year.
TMC Africa, a mortgage consultancy firm, said that
at best borrowers have been able to get offers but rates still remain
high to the point that many would-be homeowners are becoming tenants.
“No mainstream bank actually cut its rate,
although a cluster of the more expensive banks, rooted in a model of
more personalised and individual banking relationships, negotiated
better rates, on occasion, with individual customers,” said TMC Africa
chief executive Caroline Kariuki.
Hass found that the average mortgage cost 16.89 per cent as at January 23. Standard Chartered Bank
had the lowest rate at 13.9 per cent while Consolidated Bank had the
highest rate at 19 per cent. The difference between the bench rate and
the bank rate, which is as much as 10 per cent is a sign that banks are
reluctant to lend to the private sector. “They are being priced to
reduce demand,” said Ms Kariuki.
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