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Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by Atouke: 3:45am On Sep 19, 2013
ABUJA (Reuters) - On one of the most exclusive streets in Nigeria's capital sits a crumbling mansion with an unwelcoming message painted at its entrance: "BEWARE! THIS HOUSE IS NOT FOR SALE".

The warning refers to a popular property scam. In the most elaborate version, robbers break into your house while you are away, change the locks, and then produce multiple copies of fake title deeds. Posing as estate agents, they show buyers around your house and sell as many copies of the deeds as possible. When you get back, your house belongs to six people.

This sort of deception epitomizes the tricky nature of Nigeria's real estate business, but despite the risks, there are huge returns to be had in a market where around 16 million homes are needed just to meet current demand.

Navigating through opaque land laws, corruption, a lack of development expertise and financing, a dearth of mortgages and high building costs will take courage and influential local partners.

"There are sizeable challenges to overcome but in many ways Nigeria represents the perfect storm for real estate investment; huge population, rapid urbanization and a growing middle-class," said Michael Chu'di Ejekam, Director of Nigerian Real Estate at Actis, a London-based private equity firm.

Actis has $5.2 billion under management, including two sub-Saharan Africa real estate equity funds totaling $434 million, which it says are attracting U.S. and European investors.

Nigeria's population of nearly 170 million is bigger than Russia's and its economy is growing at 6 percent, a combination which is producing a new wave of property buyers from bankers and airline staff to mobile phone and fast food shop owners. for full article visit the webpage below

http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/sns-rt-us-nigeria-property-analysis-20130915,0,1691442,full.story
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by Atouke: 3:54am On Sep 19, 2013
"I see demand from the middle-class higher than ever before," said Deolu Dara, Associate Vice President at Nigeria-based Avante Property Asset Management, which manages several multi-million dollar residential projects in Lagos.

A successful real estate investment in Nigeria can earn an returns as high as 30-35 percent, while rental income yields in cities such as Lagos and Abuja can easily reach 10 percent, developers and estate agents say.

MIDDLE CLASS

Property in Lagos, a heaving metropolis of around 20 million people, can be among the most expensive in the world with two-bedroom flats costing more than $1 million in upmarket areas.

However, the top-end range is dominated by well established players and developers should target middle-income workers in major cities, such Lagos, Abuja and the oil-hub Port Harcourt. The most popular units fall in a price bracket of 20-35 million naira ($123,000-$214,100), developers and estate agents say.

Nigeria's middle class make up around 23 percent of the population and earn around 80,000- 100,000 naira ($490-$610) per month, according to report by investment bank Renaissance Capital.

In smaller cities and rural areas, a lack of information about land and regulation is off-putting, while a violent Islamist insurgency has made the north of Nigeria unattractive, despite huge unmet demand in cities such as Kano and Kaduna.

The majority of Nigerians live in poverty in shanty towns or in basic concrete block and iron-roofed houses they have built themselves, but building mass housing for the poor is not a popular investment.

"If you know the market, the people, focus on middle class and cherry pick your deals, you can clean out," added Dara, who said Africa's biggest oil and gas industry is also driving demand. One foreign oil major bought 300 flats recently.

Nigeria's construction and real estate sectors are growing at more than 10 and 12 percent respectively, a boon for foreign and Nigerian construction firms, including UPDC, Cappa D'Alberto and Julius Berger.

Yet, there is still not enough quality affordable housing because business is frustrated by widespread corruption, poor state infrastructure and a lack of expertise and financing.

Constructing a block of flats costs three times as much in Nigeria than in South Africa, builders say, and many developments are abandoned when projects run out of money or become slums because they are poorly built.

London-based estate agent Jones Lang LaSalle ranks Nigeria 96th out of 97 on its transparency index, just in front of Sudan but behind six other African countries.

Having support from powerful politicians or business magnates will help to avoid terminal financial pitfalls.

LOCAL PARTNERS

"It's a business that requires local partners and local knowledge or you'll run into problems," Dara at Avante says.

Avante's chairman is Wale Tinubu, the head of oil and gas firm Oando and a close relative of former Lagos state governor Bola Tinubu, who still wields influence there.

London-based Actis has given directorships to Nigerian energy firm Seven Energy and local conglomerate UAC.

Once the supply challenges have been overcome, there remains a problem with that huge latent demand. No mortgages. Unless you are willing to pay a 25 percent interest rate.

The mortgage debt-to-GDP ratio in Nigeria is under 0.5 percent, compared with 72 percent in the U.S. and over 30 percent in Malaysia and South Africa, government figures show.

"In places like America you seem to be able to buy property without a stress but it just isn't like that here," said Ike Ejekam, 31, who is about to buy a newly-built two-bedroom apartment for 20 million naira in a gated community in the popular Lekki district on the Lagos peninsula.

Ejekam represents the new breed of buyers who expect well-built housing with all the modern conveniences. He works at a branch of a local bank and is using his life savings and funds borrowed from family members to buy his property outright.

"I don't like to think about mortgages because it scares me when I see how difficult it is for my friends to get a loan."

Nigerian banks don't like giving out mortgages because reliable information about buyers and land is scarce, while there is no secondary market to offset the risks.

MORTGAGE DENIED

The government says it is trying to fix this by securing a $300 million loan from the World Bank to establish a mortgage refinancing company, which should free up some bank lending.

A Federal Mortgage Bank was also launched this year, which government hopes will help build 500,000 new homes. The bank plans to float a 200 billion naira mortgage bond, the proceeds from which can be handed over to home buyers with the state guaranteeing against default for five years.

The government is also discussing passing legislation to create a secondary mortgage market and to improve land laws.

"With this sense of urgency we could have a significant improvement in the mortgage market by 2015," United Bank for Africa CEO Phillips Oduoza told Reuters.

This optimism is also being felt by developers as dozens of well-financed projects are underway, including the Eko Atlantic City - a multi-billion dollar project built from 9 square kilometers of land being reclaimed from the sea in Lagos.

The billionaire Chagoury brothers, who are of Lebanese descent, are leading the mega-project, which will feature parks, swimming pools and skyscrapers with floor-to-ceiling glass. Banks, including France's BNP Paribas, Belgium's KBC and several Nigerian lenders are on board.

In Abuja, UPDC has started its 228-unit 'Metro City', which consists of well-designed blocks with balconies built in palm-fringed private compounds. Privately owned Churchgate Group is building its ambitious $1 billion World Trade Centre, a series of skyscrapers housing offices, flats and upscale shops.

"Nigeria is a huge real estate opportunity," said Ejekam at Actis. "The story is getting out, slowly."

($1 = 162.9 Nigerian naira)
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by ifyalways(f): 6:58am On Sep 19, 2013
Lie lie story.
When people travel,they not just mount 24/7 security on their property but also inform family, neighbours, church members and friends who occasionally come check the house.
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by ilaugh1: 7:03am On Sep 19, 2013
ifyalways: Lie lie story.
When people travel,they not just mount 24/7 security on their property but also inform family, neighbours, church members and friends who occasionally come check the house.

What are you trying to say in relevance to the story?
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by ifyalways(f): 7:08am On Sep 19, 2013
i_laugh:

What are you trying to say in relevance to the story?
Did your eyes miss his story of thieves breaking into peoples home,changing the locks and selling the property?
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by Omexonomy: 7:24am On Sep 19, 2013
ifyalways: Lie lie story.
When people travel,they not just mount 24/7 security on their property but also inform family, neighbours, church members and friends who occasionally come check the house.
people will always tell lies to archive what they want.
E.g those guys that have always been telling you truck load of lies that they love you.
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by Nobody: 7:55am On Sep 19, 2013
ifyalways:
Did your eyes miss his story of thieves breaking into peoples home,changing the locks and selling the property?

Stuff like that happens in Abuja to be fair.

The whole article smirks of this "africa rising" narrative that's usually off the mark. Nigeria's middle- class earns between 80k and 100k?? 960k -1.2m a year. Issorai...;d


Big problem we have is putting the cart before the horse. Smh...
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by ilaugh1: 6:50pm On Sep 19, 2013
ifyalways:
Did your eyes miss his story of thieves breaking into peoples home,changing the locks and selling the property?

Simple question, see answer.
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by Horus(m): 7:07pm On Sep 19, 2013

1 Like

Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by cecegorz(m): 10:04pm On Sep 19, 2013
TouchDown:

Stuff like that happens in Abuja to be fair.

The whole article smirks of this "africa rising" narrative that's usually off the mark. Nigeria's middle- class earns between 80k and 100k?? 960k -1.2m a year. Issorai...;d


Big problem we have is putting the cart before the horse. Smh...
I really wonder which kind of valuation puts 1.2m/annum earners in the middle class. That's just the house rent for the real middle class.
No doubt the property market will continue to be in the upswing but also saying that a 2-bed apartment sells for $1m is simply demonic!
It's either this writer has no clue about the exchange rate or he is just pulling figures from a bowler hat.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by redsun(m): 10:36pm On Sep 19, 2013
Any thing is possible in nigeria.Nigerians use any trick in the book to scam those they consider mugus,those that are not "fast".It is a pure dog eat dog scenero in nigeria,perpetuated from the very top.

On average,being honest is being stupid in nigeria.
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by lamba3: 11:33pm On Sep 19, 2013
Why not put the yahoo news link? Probably because every single comment there is just mocking and insulting Nigeria eh.
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by Stunner1(f): 1:38am On Sep 20, 2013
happens in abuja steady
Re: Nigeria's Property Boom: Only For The Brave by shady26(m): 7:37pm On Nov 24, 2013
cecegorz:
I really wonder which kind of valuation puts 1.2m/annum earners in the middle class. That's just the house rent for the real middle class.
No doubt the property market will continue to be in the upswing but also saying that a 2-bed apartment sells for $1m is simply demonic!
It's either this writer has no clue about the exchange rate or he is just pulling figures from a bowler hat.
he is correct cause he mentioned highbrow areas in Lagos. Find out from Google rents in ikoyi and banana island. I visted a property sometime early this year for business and was told the rent is 17m per annum for a three bedroom flat.now that was a very old house and nowhere near banana island.

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