This is some good news for the residential property market and the real estate industry, which is under considerable pressure at present. While we have seen a very positive response to our iShow technology - which enables us to showcase properties for sale online via video viewings and virtual show days using Facebook's Watch Party functionality - buyers remain hesitant to commit on the basis of 'sight unseen'. Once real estate is allowed to operate at full strength, which we hope will be in the near future, we will be able to ascertain the net effect of the recent extensive reduction in interest rates thus far this year.
That said, the time to buy is clearly now, as the lower price band (below R1m) continues to see house price inflation escalate, with the latest Pam Golding Residential Property Index showing house prices in this price band rising by 6.9% in April (2020). Notable among the metro markets, and according to the latest data from Lightstone, Cape Town house price inflation (4.2% in January 2020) continues to rebound, followed by Nelson Mandela Bay (3.5%) and eThekwini (3.2%) holding steady. Compared with a national average of 2.6%, this is indicative of the fact that housing markets in the coastal metros continue to outperform, but obviously these results reflect a pre-Covid world and it remains to be seen what kind of market there will be post lockdown.
Further good news for consumers - and for the inflation outlook in general - is that although the fuel price is probably set to increase by close to 50c per litre in June, with diesel set to decline once more, this still leaves it approximately R3.50 per litre lower than at the start of the year.
Dr Andrew Golding