Rate hikes unlikely to weigh on SA home buying in 2022

Rising interest rates are unlikely to affect home buying in South Africa this year, according to FirstRand Ltd.’s First National Bank.

The lender expects the central bank to raise its benchmark rate by at least 75 basis points in 2022 because of mounting inflationary pressures and plans by advanced economies including the US to raise borrowing costs. While higher rates may have a “cooling effect” on market transactions and price growth, the current wave of buying is largely being driven by wealthier buyers who are less sensitive to interest rates, Siphamandla Mkhwanazi, an economist at FNB, said in a note.

Total mortgage advances stood at R1.63 trillion ($106 billion) in the nine months through September, compared with R1.56 trillion in 2020, according to central bank data.

Record-low borrowing costs coupled with lower average house prices at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic “encouraged greater interest in mortgage borrowing,” the central bank said in its six-monthly Monetary Policy Review in October. “Anecdotal evidence and the elevated rental vacancy rates suggest that the favorable conditions enabled some tenants to upgrade to owner-occupiers.”

Over the medium-term, a slow recovery in the labour market of an economy where more than a third of the workforce is unemployed and rising interest rates suggests a less supportive environment for buying activity, Mkhwanazi said.

© 2022 Bloomberg

Source: moneyweb.co.za