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Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan’s announcement that the threshold at which transfer duty applies will increase from R500 000 to R600 000 is welcome news for the property industry, particularly the residential market, which has been depressed since 2008, David Warmback, a partner at Durban-based law firm Shepstone & Wylie, says.

This year’s Budget is the first time in five years that property transfer duties have been adjusted. The new rates, effective from February 23 this year, are:

* You will pay no transfer duty on property with a value of up to R600 000;

* On the value between R600 001 and R1 million, the duty is three percent of the value above R600 000;

* On the value between R1 000 001 and R1.5 million, the duty is R12 000 plus five percent of the value above R1 million; and

* On the value at R1 500 001 and above, the duty is R37 000 plus eight percent of the value exceeding R1.5 million.

Gordhan said in his Budget speech this week that the sliding scale at which transfer duty is levied will also apply to companies, close corporations and trusts. Previously, the sliding scale applied only to individuals, whereas companies, close corporations and trusts paid transfer duty at a flat rate of eight percent.

Warmback says although transactions in the commercial and industrial property sector are often subject to VAT (transfer duty does not apply if the seller is a VAT vendor), smaller businesses that buy property from a non-VAT vendor will benefit from the new transfer duty rates.

“With the stagnation of property prices over the past few years, the change to transfer duty should bring welcome relief to those in the property market – not only first-time and low-income home-buyers but buyers in higher price ranges as well,” Warmback says.

Jacques du Toit, the senior property analyst at Absa Home Loans, says the decrease in transfer duty rates is an attempt by the government to promote homeownership and to address the affordability of housing, especially among the lower-income population.

“This, together with government’s housing subsidy and the banks’ mortgage lending criteria for low-income and first-time property buyers, will support the lower end of the market.”

Du Toit says that in the absence of further interest rate cuts expected in 2011, the lower transfer duty and expected higher level of economic growth should support the residential property market this year.

Gordhan also announced that the government is exploring establishing a savings scheme that will provide first-time homeowners with a deposit as an alternative to the exemption on interest earnings.

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THE MIDDLE EAST CRISIS, PROPERTY AND HOUSEHOLD INDEBTEDNESS -25 February 2010

Unpredictable Middle East is raising the risks to the local housing market and to household finances

As Brent Crude oil prices hit intraday levels of around $119/barrel, sharply up from below $100/barrel only a few days ago and fuelled by major unrest across several countries (the most troubled one seemingly Libya at present), those of linked to the domestic residential property market in some way would do well to appreciate that global oil markets and our local residential market do have a very significant link.

The link to local property comes via 3 key routes. Firstly, given major economies’ high dependence on oil, notably the world’s largest economy the USA, sharply higher oil costs can hamper economic growth in those countries. This in turn can negatively affect the demand for exports from a country such as South Africa, hampering our economic output, job creation, and thus income growth.

That implies the risk of a negative impact on potential residential property purchasing power, should this oil price surge persist.

The second link comes via the impact that higher oil prices can have on domestic inflation raising not only the price of petrol as paid by the consumer, but also on the price of certain consumer products and services where petroleum is used as a production input. During the last global oil spike of 2008, the rise of oil prices were even said to have some impact on the food price spike at the time, this being due to higher oil prices improving ethanol planting prospects, and speculation that this may “crowd out” a portion of agricultural production. This all helped to drive our own inflation significantly higher and “crowd out” a portion disposable income that may have in part been used for housing or home loan debt-servicing purposes.

Thirdly, given the SARB’s inflation target of 3% to 6%, rising inflation can ultimately mean rising interest rates, and that can be a major negative factor for such a credit-driven market as the residential property market.

At present, I would not even like to hazard a guess as to where the Middle East Crisis is going to end. As quickly as oil price spikes appear they can also disappear. Hopefully the situation will be resolved speedily. However, it is important to realize that the 2008 oil price spike played an important role in the housing slump at that time (although to date the current oil price is still a fair distance lower than the near- $150/barrel peak of 2008), and such a spike can do so again. With the crisis seemingly having become a multi-country issue, it significantly raises the risks to the economy, to inflation, and thus to the well-being of the local residential property market.

Therefore, for the time being our Firstrand expectation is for interest rates to only start rising late in 2011, and for the rise to be slow and moderate, with inflation rising only gradually to the higher end of the inflation target range. This expectation has been based on gradually growing global inflation pressures for some time. The Reserve Bank has recently been warning about inflation risks. That has been, for some time, the anticipated source of risk to residential performance. Under this moderately deteriorating inflation and interest rate scenario we anticipate some mild house price decline for 2011 as a whole.

It would be premature to change any predictions away from the very moderate scenario sketched for 2011. How the current volatility in the oil market is going to play itself out remains to be seen, and is far from predictable. However, our view is that it does add significantly to the already-perceived risks, and the currently high household debt-to-disposable income ratio of 78.5% (not far from historic highs of 82%) makes the country’s household sector vulnerable to external shocks. It is thus a time for especially potential credit-dependent home buyers to proceed with caution, until such time as the world had greater clarity on where the politics of this major oil-producing part of the world is headed.

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