Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa March 2014 | Page 16

COVER STORY property, because the interest – the cost of credit – is a mind blowing R521 704 – and that’s without the upfront bond costs of R7 340. Indeed, if you are paying more than double for a property, it most certainly becomes unaffordable. As Stuart Murray, co-founder and former editor of FinWeek commented in a recent Pam Golding media statement: “The key to a healthier residential property market lies with the banks. A major issue when seeking a mortgage bond is not simply the strict lending criteria laid down by the National Credit Act. It is the fact that while we still have the lowest prime lending rate in decades, consumers face stiff repayment costs for credit, whether involved in a home mortgage bond, vehicle f inance or whatever. The National Credit Act, admittedly, places a ceiling of 16.5% on mortgage interest rates, so bondholders will pay somewhere between 9% and 16.5%. Is this really low? Hardly, by international standards – or by current disposable income levels. The average required deposit is also a stiff hill to climb for many aspirant homebuyers, although mortgage broker ooba reports that banks are approving slightly lower deposits, down to 14.66%.” A new way of buying property It is hardly likely that the banks will come to the rescue of the property market. They have brought the entire property market to a standstill because they won’t extend credit against the security of a solid asset class, and if they do, they provide this credit as such a high interest rate, it becomes unaffordable. And when the buyer does not have to obtain finance, which is time-consuming and difficult, and does not have to fund the bank-imposed sky-high cost of finance, property suddenly becomes much more affordable. How does it work? Installment sales is a method of buying property made possible through a little-known piece of legislation called the Alienation of Land Act no. 68 of 1981 (ALA), which protects both the seller and the buyer. It is one of the few pieces of legislation passed in South Africa that actually empowers the people of this country. “ “Estate agents report that about 5% of current property sales are concluded through an installment sale” The ALA came into effect in 1981 to provide an alternative to property sellers and buyers who could not obtain loans from the building societies that, at the time, required a 50% deposit. It was again widely used in the late 1990’s, when the interest rate was 25.5%, making bonds entirely unaffordable. An installment sale allows the purchaser to buy a property by paying the seller in more than two installments (in usual bank-financed transactions there are two installments: the deposit and the final settlement amount) and over a period longer than one year, but not longer than five years. What we need is a new way of buying property that circumvents the two main challenges we face in the property market today: the unavailability of credit and the cost of credit. In short, we need a way to buy property without finance from the banks. And it already exists. It is called an installment sale. Estate agents report that about 5% of current property sales are concluded through an installment sale. ALA transactions also fall under the NCA, which places such onerous conditions on the parties that installment sales involving an amount exceeding R500 000 is only practical if the property is purchased b HHY