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House prices surprise on upside

Dec 01 2009 14:47 Joan Muller

Johannesburg - Economists may have been a tad too bearish about recovery prospects in the residential property market, with First National Bank (FNB) now the second bank having to adjust its house price growth forecasts upwards.

Figures released by FNB on Tuesday showed the bank's house price index returned to positive growth territory in November for the first time in a year. The index, which is based on FNB's own mortgage book, recorded an unexpected 2% jump in average house prices in November year-on-year. In October prices were still falling by -0.9%.

FNB strategist John Loos said he had not expected house prices to start rising again before early 2010. The fact that the housing market appears to be recovering at a quicker pace than previously anticipated prompted him to adjust his 5% growth forecast for 2010 upwards to between 7% and 8%.

Said Loos: "It now appears that our previous price growth forecast for 2010 may have been slightly on the conservative side." The return of FNB's house price index to positive growth follows that of Absa, which resumed annualised house price growth in September already. The bank recorded a rise of 1.3% in that month, followed by a relatively strong 2.6% in October year-on-year.

Although Absa's housing data for November will only be released later this week, the bank's senior housing analyst Jacques du Toit has already adjusted his growth forecasts upward. "Given recent house price trends, it's possible that price deflation for the full 2009 will be less than 1.5%."

In early September, Du Toit was still expecting a 3% drop in average house prices for 2009. His growth forecast for 2010 is slightly less bullish than that of Loos, with expected growth of 3%.

More homeloans approved

Standard Bank is the only bank whose property book is still recording price falls. Data released on Tuesday show the bank's house price index recorded a drop of -4.5% in November year-on year, a slight improvement from October's -4.6% decline.

However, it appears that Standard Bank's continued prices declines could be ascribed to the methodology used to measure house price movements. Standard Bank tracks median house prices, while FNB and Absa track average prices.

Standard Bank senior economist Johan Botha said it appears that more lower-priced properties were sold in November than in October, which probably skewed median prices downwards. Standard Bank's median house price came to R550 000 in November, compared to FNB's R773 018 and Absa's R991 200 (October).

Botha said there is no doubt that prospective homebuyers are returning to the market, and that the more relaxed lending criteria announced by banks in early September had already led to more homeloan application approvals.

Latest Reserve Bank figures show that Absa is still the biggest player in SA's R713.2bn mortgage lending market with a 29.8% share, followed by Standard Bank at 27.2%, Nedbank at 21.5% and FNB at 15%.

- Fin24.com

 

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SAGE
Dec 04 2009 14:54 Report this comment

@Median...thanks for the heads up,but I assumed it was a typo for MEAN so i filtered thru and muddled the explanation up. It happens at 2am in the morning. It is however wrong because who calculates the median house price anyway? Look at my example and see why...in both senarios the meadian stays R10K regardless of what happens at both ends of the scale! The house price volatility is a function of average prices not median prices! Sorry for the lack of clarity.
 
Median @ sage
Dec 04 2009 12:46 Report this comment

uhm, no Sage, median is not average. Median is the middle position in a range of sorted values. So in both your examples the median would be R10k
 
SAGE
Dec 04 2009 01:19 Report this comment

@no trust..median = average.So it is possible e.g.if you sell 10 houses at R10K each and 2 at R100K each the median is ((10x10000)+(2*200000)) divided by 12 houses=average R41666.67 per house.Now lets say you sell 25 houses @ R10K and 2 houses @220 000...the median drops to R25000 coz even though the high end houses have increased in price,the shear volume of low cost houses drags on it.This is exactly why recovery talk is fiction cos in a mnth the opposite cn happen increasing ave values!
 
No Trust
Dec 03 2009 10:50 Report this comment

Why would cheap housing go up but median housing go down? The article doesn't explain it to me.
 
vc
Dec 01 2009 22:09 Report this comment

Seems like Standard bank is the only one that knows what is going on out there.
 
aker
Dec 01 2009 20:52 Report this comment

Comon - Property is always good - just ask Dubai World.
 
SAGE
Dec 01 2009 19:50 Report this comment

Utter rubbish. This is a dead cat bounce. For those who don't know the term...its a stockbroking term based on the simple physics that if you throw something hard enough even if dead, it will bounce so that for a split second it will seem as if it has life. caveat emptor! The inflationary pressure of the recovery in Europe is soon upon us then rates will go up again and house prices will tank, world cup or no world cup.
 
Johnathan
Dec 01 2009 15:45 Report this comment

Well, Soothsayer, that's kind-of a self-fulfilling prophecy, isn't it? ANYTHING is a good investment as long as you "buy at the right price", isn't it? (Assuming that "the right price" is a price that is lower than what it going to be in 10 years' time...)
 
 
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