Egypt to pour new housing into seemingly sated market

In Egypt, 13 million units are either under construction or finished but unoccupied, ­compared to 22.5 million units that are inhabited.
NAMPA
Patrick Werr



Egypt's government plans to pour tens of thousands of new housing units onto the market in each of the next few years, but it's not clear how easily the country can absorb them.

The authorities say they want to reduce crowding in Egypt's congested cities and provide homes for the poor but many analysts say the new residences are priced way beyond the means of most Egyptians and a good share of them will remain unsold.

The government is undeterred, however, and is moving full steam ahead on a new capital city 50 km east of Cairo, a project that is designed to deliver 240 000 new housing units over the next five years.

It is also in the second year of a five-year plan to provide a million ­subsidised homes for the poor.

According to press reports, 150 000 low-income units have already been delivered and another 260 000 are under construction.

Dozens of other housing projects, many spearheaded by the army, are underway.

Activity is especially strong along the Suez Canal, which has been declared a special economic zone, at Gabal Galala in the mountains along the Gulf of Suez and at al-Alamein on the Mediterranean coast.

A network of highways and residential streets has been extended into the desert around Cairo to make way for the new developments, especially to the east towards Suez, in anticipation of a flow of buyers seeking to escape the crowded confines of the Nile Valley.

Investment

opportunities

Some of the demand for new housing is coming from Egyptians working overseas who sent more than US$5 billion back to Egypt in the third quarter of 2017 alone.

With inflation now running at an annual 22% and expected to remain in the double digits for several years at least, Egyptians have been searching for investments that will preserve the value of their assets.

Because of years of restrictions on sending cash abroad, the only place most Egyptians inside the country can invest their cash, apart from the country's small stock exchange or in interest-bearing bank accounts, is in real estate.

As a result, Egyptians have been snapping up apartments and villas in new desert developments, confident that housing prices have nowhere to go but up in an overcrowded country whose population is growing by 2.5% a year.

“The more inflation is on the rise, the more people will run towards real estate, regardless of the real demand and real supply,” property consultant Haitham Khalifa said.



Vast pool

This rush to buy real estate has created a vast pool of housing, but it is unclear who will want to buy or rent them when their owners decide they want to cash in on their investments. Row upon row of houses now stand empty.

For many Egyptians, these properties are their main investments. Many wealthy people have bought dozens of villas and apartments, with some rented out and others sitting empty.

According to a census released in October by the state statistics agency CAPMAS, 13 million units are either under construction or finished but unoccupied, compared to 22.5 million units that are inhabited.

Added together, this works out to 35.5 million units in a country with a population of 96.4 million, or 2.7 people per unit.

Signs are emerging that the new government housing projects will be entering a market that is already saturated, especially at the higher end.



Falling prices

Measured in US dollars, housing prices in Egypt dropped substantially after the government devalued the currency by half in November 2016.

Wael Ziada, head of investment company Zilla Capital, estimates that prices have fallen to about US$800 per square metre from US$1 000 before the devaluation.

“This is something companies will never tell you. They will not go below their headline prices,” said Ziada, who until recently was head of research at EFG Hermes, Egypt's biggest investment bank. “What they may do is allow for a smaller down payment and a longer period so that the effective price will go down.”

Aly Allouba, the head of Cairo-based Edge Portfolio Management, gives an example. At the end of 2013, he had his eye on a townhouse in a compound built by one of the smaller property developers. The seller at the time was asking two million Egyptian pounds, when the pound was at 6.95 to the US dollar, or US$288 000.

The seller was demanding 15% down, with the rest paid in quarterly installments over four years.

Now, four years later, the seller is asking 4 million pounds (US$227 000) for the same townhouse, but with only 10% down and quarterly installments over eight years instead of four. Adjusting for Egypt's double-digit inflation, the extended payments have substantially reduced the cost of the unit.



Primary market

Economists and real estate agents say most sales have been in the primary market, partly because property developers are prepared to provide finance in a country where mortgage finance is still rare, while the secondary market is relatively dormant.

Still, Yasseen Mansour, chairman of Palm Hills Development, one of Egypt's biggest private property developers, estimates demand for “high-middle to high-end” housing at up to 90 000 units per year, and that only 24 000 such units were supplied in 2016.

“You have a million marriages a year and 2.5 million people coming into the market every year,” he told Reuters.

Palm Hills in October acquired the rights to develop 12.6 million square metres of desert land 15 kilometres west of the pyramids, where it will develop 37 000 housing units. It will begin selling the units in April or May, Mansour said. This is in addition to more than 7 000 units it is developing in other areas in Egypt.



Affordability

The average wage for Egyptians, including government and private sector employees, was about 4 000 pounds a month in 2016, according to CAPMAS, putting most new housing well out of the reach of the bulk of the population.

“There is nothing at all active in our country these days except for small apartments,” said Hany Osman, who founded and runs El Shams Real Estate, a high-end estate agency.

He said the typical high-end buyer has been hurt by an economic slowdown since Egypt's 2011 popular uprising.– Nampa/Reuters

Kommentaar

Republikein 2024-11-23

Geen kommentaar is op hierdie artikel gelaat nie

Meld asseblief aan om kommentaar te lewer

Katima Mulilo: 20° | 36° Rundu: 20° | 37° Eenhana: 22° | 36° Oshakati: 25° | 35° Ruacana: 22° | 36° Tsumeb: 23° | 36° Otjiwarongo: 22° | 35° Omaruru: 23° | 36° Windhoek: 23° | 34° Gobabis: 23° | 35° Henties Bay: 14° | 19° Swakopmund: 14° | 16° Walvis Bay: 13° | 20° Rehoboth: 23° | 35° Mariental: 24° | 38° Keetmanshoop: 24° | 39° Aranos: 28° | 38° Lüderitz: 13° | 25° Ariamsvlei: 23° | 40° Oranjemund: 13° | 21° Luanda: 25° | 26° Gaborone: 22° | 36° Lubumbashi: 17° | 32° Mbabane: 18° | 31° Maseru: 16° | 32° Antananarivo: 17° | 31° Lilongwe: 22° | 33° Maputo: 23° | 31° Windhoek: 23° | 34° Cape Town: 17° | 27° Durban: 20° | 25° Johannesburg: 19° | 31° Dar es Salaam: 26° | 32° Lusaka: 22° | 33° Harare: 21° | 31° #REF! #REF!