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According
to the latest Rode's Report on the SA Property Market, in the fourth quarter
of 2009 the overall growth in market rentals for office space was weak.
This was especially evident in Cape Town (-6%) and Johannesburg (-4%)
decentralized, where rentals were, on average, lower than what they were
a year ago. But, this comes as no surprise in light of the faster northward
march of prime-office vacancies in these two decentralized regions.
Even on the industrial front, nominal rentals have continued to shrink
- despite the upward movement in the fourth quarter of 2009 in manufacturing
output and capacity utilization. The Central Witwatersrand, Durban, Port
Elizabeth and the Cape Peninsula all registered lower nominal rentals
than a year earlier. "However," notes Rode, "because building-cost
inflation has actually declined by 9%, we have the anomalous situation
that real rentals have actually shown positive growth."
Flat rentals also remained stagnant for the most part. While Durban mustered
a growth of 4%, Johannesburg, Pretoria and Cape Town showed rentals roughly
at the same level of a year ago. Port Elizabeth showed the poorest performance
as rentals contracted by 2%.
Comments Rode: "This stagnation is indicative of the financial stress
being experienced by both incumbent and prospective flat tenants. Usually,
during tough economic times, doubling up' occurs on a large scale,
keeping the demand for rental residential space in check." An example
of doubling up is children moving in with their parents.
After weakening during 2008, owing to uncertain economic conditions both
locally and abroad, capitalization rates finally turned the corner in
the first quarter of 2009, heading marginally south and sideways once
again.
"However", adds Rode, "given the poor performance of market
rentals, the principal risk to the outlook for capitalization rates remains
the scaled-down expectations regarding the direction of real rentals.
This, potentially, could lead to property investors requiring higher income
returns from property because of lower capital-return prospects."
Please note: Capitalization rates are the property equivalent of the
forward earnings yield of shares; this implies that declining capitalization
rates result in rising market values, and vice versa.
*This article was first published by Rode & Associates Property
Consultants and is published with their permission.
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