Banker S.A. July 2014 | Page 28

PROPERTY MARKET Although plush areas in Sandton, such as Bryanston and Sandhurst, are still said to be ruling the realty roots on the whole of the continent, there’s nothing like the painful reminder that if wealth and privilege are to be had, you’re on the wrong side of the mountain if you’re living in Khayelitsha. Renting an average-sized home in Campers, with three bedrooms and a bathroom and no view, will set you back around R40 000 a month. Do the maths. In Khayelitsha’s better, more established areas, places such as, say, J Section, you could rent the same-sized home – okay, a little smaller – for R2 500 a month. Retail prices elsewhere in comparison with Camps Bay dip drastically. Sandton’s best come in at an average price of R2 044 787, a little shabby compared to Ballito: R2 418 182. In Waverley in the Free State, expect to pay around R1 920 526 for your stately residence, R924 795 in Nelspruit, R1 278 905 in Walmer, R879 516 in Bendor, R1 061 061 in Cashan, and R1 193 353 in Rhodesdene. These areas, especially those from the Free State to the Northern Cape, reflect how prices appear to have nosed downward. Comparatively speaking, poorer areas in these provinces seem to be doing well: R367 786 in Mangaung, R296 600 in Bethelsdorp. Marikana is the only exception. If ever there’s doubt about the negativity of news, consider that you can pick up a three-bedroomer for R65 651 in Marikana at the moment. It’s the only area where buying, for the moment, is decidedly cheaper than renting. On the Zim corridor, for example, investors are in a buying frenzy because rentals are that strong. And the longer the frenzy, the less in the trough, which is why diminishing supply is driving prices up. These, for the moment, are the stats. Camps Bay Ballito Sandton Waverley (Free State) Walmer Rhodesdene Cashan Nelspruit Bendor Manguang Bethelsdorp Galeshewe Khayelitsha The history of homeloans Homeloans have been around for longer then we realise, writes Eugene Goddard Mortgage is such a grave word, right there in the first syllable, yet it holds all of the promise of security and comfort – if you can get one, that is. Ironically enough, homeloans have been with us only since the Great Depression when, believe it or not, insurance companies sniffed opportunity at the prospect of another economic collapse.Sensing easy spoils, the initial intention by intrepid insurers wasn’t making money through fees and interest rates, but snatching property from defaulting lenders. According to How Stuff Works, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) adopted the idea to haul most of America’s population out of the quagmire following the crushing effect of the stock market crash of 29 October 1929. Today’s prospective home owners, battling to get onto the property ladder, have absolutely nothing on the deprivations endured in the wake of Black Tuesday. In 1934, when the FHA formerly embarked on a home-loan rollout drive to boost the economy, mortgage loan terms were limited to 50% of the property’s market value, and the repayment schedule was spread over three to five years, ending with a bulk payment. An 80% loan at that time meant your down-payment was 80%, and not the amount you financed. No wonder it took the US longer than anticipated to emerge from the depression. The 8