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What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership - Properties - Nairaland

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What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 9:32pm On May 13, 2021
In January 2020, Chikezie Nnabuike, a manager at a private firm in Lagos, started building a house away from where he resides presently. Because of the COVID-19 lockdown work slowed on the building project being supervised by an engineer who was his roommate in the university.

He did not, however, give up on his plan to complete the building in 18 months, in which case he expected to finish the walling and roofing aspects of the building, latest, by the end of the second quarter of 2021. But that has turned out to be a dream deferred.


The house, today, is not yet 60 percent completed, meaning that he is still a tenant and will remain so for as long as only God knows when. The rising prices of building materials, particularly cement and iron rods, have, in the past six months, risen to a point where all building projections no longer make sense.

“I started out this project on a budget for the entire building. Now, I have not gone very far with the project, but I have already surpassed the budget because it is as if building materials are rising every day,” Nnabuike told our correspondent last Thursday.

“I have suspended that project, for now, because I can no longer keep pace with price increases, especially cement and iron rods, which I was told were needed for beams and columns. Besides the project, I have a family to feed. Even feeding does not come easy these days and so I have had to re-order my priorities, he said.

Nnabuike is not an isolated case. There are countless others like him out there and what this means is that homeownership for all of them remains a daydream. They have to continue as tenants where they are, enduring landlords’ arbitrary increases in rents and adding to the housing deficit.


In October 2020, a 50kg bag of cement was selling for between N2,400 and N2,500 in many states of the federation. But in November of the same year, the price of the commodity started rising and has increased to N3,800, depending on the brand and the location.

“In the last 24 hours, the price of cement has gone up from N3,450 to N3,800 and it will still go up. We are, therefore, rushing to get more that can take us for a while,” Kunle Adeyemi, CEO, Sterling Homes, confirmed to our correspondent in Lagos.


According to Adeyemi, at the current price, it means that cement price within the first quarter of this year has moved over 70 percent and it is so bad that some dealers are hoarding the commodity because they are sure the price will still go up further.

So many reasons have been adduced for the soaring price of cement. One of the major reasons is the scarcity of the product which, unfortunately, has to do with rising insecurity in the country, supply monopoly and also cost of inputs, which has also gone up considerably.

“Producers do not supply the commodity to some parts of the country because of insecurity. They fear attacks by kidnappers, bandits and other insurgents. Again, the roads are so bad that the suppliers avoid them, leading to scarcity and rise in the price of the product,” Adeyemi noted.

There is about a 40 percent cement supply gap, according to Dangote Group, the largest producer of the commodity with over 60 percent share of the market. Devakumar Edwin, Dangote Group executive director, strategy, portfolio development and capital projects, was quoted recently as saying that manufacturers were working to close the gap.

Edwin attributed the increase in demand to increase in construction activities as investors considered the industry good to hedge against falling local currency. Edwin, who spoke at an event in Lagos, insisted that their ex-depot price had not changed but that some retailers had taken advantage of the supply gap to increase their prices.

He also mentioned devaluation of the naira and the increase in Value Added Tax as reasons for the increase in the cost of critical components such as gas, gypsum, bags and machine spare parts.

The implication of these price increases is far-reaching. “The dream of an average Nigeria to own a home is now very slim. For us as developers, it is a huge challenge because we already have the prices of houses that are still being built. We cannot deliver at that price anymore,” Adeyemi said.

Continuing, he said, “I foresee doom because some developers may be forced to compromise on quality and standards of houses they put on the market. They may go for sub-standard materials in a bid to meet up with supply and that simply foretells housing collapse and construction failure.”

He canvassed the government’s intervention through what he called price control policy that will effectively regulate the price of the commodity, saying the government should also break the monopoly in the supply of the product which, he reasoned, was part of the causes of the product scarcity.

culled from businessdaydotng

Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by benjanjo1: 3:50am On May 14, 2021
This is the time to invest in alternative building technology. Our reliance on cement for construction has proven to be unsustainable. There are other materials that can be used to erect durable and strong buildings. And I hear that some of these materials are even cheaper! I think those with the know how should begin to popularize the usage of such alternatives.
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 4:37am On May 14, 2021
benjanjo1:
This is the time to invest in alternative building technology. Our reliance on cement for construction has proven to be unsustainable. There are other materials that can be used to erect durable and strong buildings. And I hear that some of these materials are even cheaper! I think those with the know how should begin to popularize the usage of such alternatives.

"Alternative building" refers to construction methods that differ from mainstream modern architecture. They often use natural building materials, with a strong emphasis on sustainable design. Recently, popular housing materials, such as treated lumber, synthetic insulation and certain paints (to name a few) have been exposed as harmful to both the environment and the inhabitants of the houses. There is no dispute over this issue; anyone who cares to ask will find that treated lumber releases the preservatives and poisons which it was soaked in over a predictable period of time. This is where alternative construction comes in.

While green buildings most often include high technology as part of their design, alternative buildings more often depend on traditional designs (reflecting wisdom which has evolved over many generations) and creative use of locally available materials and limited resources. Indeed, some would say that "alternative building" is quite an odd phrase, considering that the strategies used to conserve energy and materials have been documented for millennia in some cases. Practices such as adobe, wattle and daub, mud-brick, rammed earth, earth bag and straw bale housing construction is alive and well. In many instances the houses are less expensive to build and maintain, healthier to live in and more sturdy and reliable than those made from "conventional" materials.

Much of the trouble with acceptance in the mainstream comes from advertising. If a company knows that the average customer is perfectly capable of building their own house of readily available materials for a fraction of the market price, then that company must convince unaware consumers that the "alternative" option simply doesn't exist. Of course, with many of these same companies sitting on planning boards, alternative construction has been given quite an unfavorable reputation in some localities.

Alternative building methods involve Eco and Green Developments which are designed to minimize energy requirements.

Sustainable buildings use materials which have a low environmental impact, eliminate sewage and wastewater pollution issues, protect the natural environment. They also promote the health and wellbeing, both physical and mental, of the occupants and those living and working close to the development.

Alternative Eco Friendly Housing should encompass all of the following:

Environmental Issues: Conservation of the sites natural resources, both plant, animal and mineral. Siting of the building for minimum heat loss through wind and shade and maximum heat gain from solar, high levels of insulation, maximising natural lighting, energy efficient appliances, sewage disposal and lighting systems.

Water and Wastewater: Rainwater harvesting, water efficient appliances, minimizing and attenuating surface water run-off to prevent flooding and pollution. Sustainable solutions for the disposal of sewage, e.g. Sewage Treatment Plant Sustainable Filter Systems.

Transport: Public transport access, close to shops, leisure facilities and work, home offices to reduce commuting.

Materials: use of long-life sustainable materials with a low environmental impact avoiding those from non-renewable and non-sustainable sources, use of locally produced materials, use of recycled materials.

Health and wellbeing: use of non-toxic materials during all stages of the build and all areas of the building, natural daylighting, freedom from noise and pollution, green spaces, non-obtrusive design which flows into the surroundings.

Affordability and adaptability: affordable ownership, flexibility of design to adapt to the changing requirements of the occupants and future owners.
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 2:09am On May 16, 2021
“Landlords grow rich in their sleep without working, risking or economizing.” - John Stuart Mill, political economist
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 4:18am On May 18, 2021
..
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 8:00pm On May 18, 2021
“Every person who invests in well-selected real estate in a growing section of a prosperous community adopts the surest and safest method of becoming independent, for real estate is the basis of wealth.” - Theodore Roosevelt, U.S. president
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 2:32am On May 28, 2021
Real estate cannot be lost or stolen, nor can it be carried away. Purchased with common sense, paid for in full, and managed with reasonable care, it is about the safest investment in the world.” ~Franklin D. Roosevelt
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 7:54pm On Jun 09, 2021
“Landlords grow rich in their sleep without working, risking or economizing.” - John Stuart Mill, political economist
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 4:12pm On Jun 12, 2021
“Every person who invests in well-selected real estate in a growing section of a prosperous community adopts the surest and safest method of becoming independent, for real estate is the basis of wealth.”
-Theodore Roosevelt
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 1:06pm On Jun 25, 2021
“Now, one thing I tell everyone is learn about real estate. Repeat after me: real estate provides the highest returns, the greatest values and the least risk.” - Armstrong Williams, entrepreneur
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 6:17pm On Jul 13, 2021
“If you don’t own a home, buy one. If you own a home, buy another one. If you own two homes, buy a third. And, lend your relatives the money to buy a home.”
John Paulson, investor and multi-billionaire
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 9:55pm On Jul 27, 2021
“If you don’t own a home, buy one. If you own a home, buy another one. If you own two homes, buy a third. And, lend your relatives the money to buy a home.”
John Paulson, investor and multi-billionaire.
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 1:47pm On Aug 17, 2021
Buying real estate is not only the best way, the quickest way, the safest way, but the only way to become wealthy.”
-Marshall Field
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 12:35am On Sep 09, 2021
..
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 4:23pm On Sep 27, 2021
“Some people look for a beautiful place. Others make a place beautiful.” - Hazrat Inayat Khan, spiritualist
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 5:20am On Oct 01, 2021
“Real estate cannot be lost or stolen, nor can it be carried away. Purchased with common sense, paid for in full, and managed with reasonable care, it is about the safest investment in the world.” - Franklin D. Roosevelt, U.S. president
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 7:28am On Oct 20, 2021
“It is a comfortable feeling to know that you stand on your own ground. Land is about the only thing that can’t fly away.” - Anthony Trollope, novelist
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 4:33pm On Nov 03, 2021
“Buy on the fringe and wait. Buy land near a growing city! Buy real estate when other people want to sell. Hold what you buy!” - John Jacob Astor, real estate and business mogul
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 5:40pm On Nov 09, 2021
“If you’re not going to put money in real estate, where else?” - Tamir Sapir, business mogul
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 9:48am On Nov 13, 2021
“Now, one thing I tell everyone is learn about real estate. Repeat after me: real estate provides the highest returns, the greatest values and the least risk.” - Armstrong Williams, entrepreneur
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 7:40am On Nov 18, 2021
“Buy real estate in areas where the path exists and buy more real estate where there is no path, but you can create your own.” David Waronker.
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 1:38am On Nov 27, 2021
..
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 8:44am On Dec 02, 2021
“Real estate cannot be lost or stolen, nor can it be carried away. Purchased with common sense, paid for in full, and managed with reasonable care, it is about the safest investment in the world.” - Franklin D. Roosevelt, U.S. president
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 1:53pm On Dec 11, 2021
Viktoreze:
In January 2020, Chikezie Nnabuike, a manager at a private firm in Lagos, started building a house away from where he resides presently. Because of the COVID-19 lockdown work slowed on the building project being supervised by an engineer who was his roommate in the university.

He did not, however, give up on his plan to complete the building in 18 months, in which case he expected to finish the walling and roofing aspects of the building, latest, by the end of the second quarter of 2021. But that has turned out to be a dream deferred.


The house, today, is not yet 60 percent completed, meaning that he is still a tenant and will remain so for as long as only God knows when. The rising prices of building materials, particularly cement and iron rods, have, in the past six months, risen to a point where all building projections no longer make sense.

“I started out this project on a budget for the entire building. Now, I have not gone very far with the project, but I have already surpassed the budget because it is as if building materials are rising every day,” Nnabuike told our correspondent last Thursday.

“I have suspended that project, for now, because I can no longer keep pace with price increases, especially cement and iron rods, which I was told were needed for beams and columns. Besides the project, I have a family to feed. Even feeding does not come easy these days and so I have had to re-order my priorities, he said.

Nnabuike is not an isolated case. There are countless others like him out there and what this means is that homeownership for all of them remains a daydream. They have to continue as tenants where they are, enduring landlords’ arbitrary increases in rents and adding to the housing deficit.


In October 2020, a 50kg bag of cement was selling for between N2,400 and N2,500 in many states of the federation. But in November of the same year, the price of the commodity started rising and has increased to N3,800, depending on the brand and the location.

“In the last 24 hours, the price of cement has gone up from N3,450 to N3,800 and it will still go up. We are, therefore, rushing to get more that can take us for a while,” Kunle Adeyemi, CEO, Sterling Homes, confirmed to our correspondent in Lagos.


According to Adeyemi, at the current price, it means that cement price within the first quarter of this year has moved over 70 percent and it is so bad that some dealers are hoarding the commodity because they are sure the price will still go up further.

So many reasons have been adduced for the soaring price of cement. One of the major reasons is the scarcity of the product which, unfortunately, has to do with rising insecurity in the country, supply monopoly and also cost of inputs, which has also gone up considerably.

“Producers do not supply the commodity to some parts of the country because of insecurity. They fear attacks by kidnappers, bandits and other insurgents. Again, the roads are so bad that the suppliers avoid them, leading to scarcity and rise in the price of the product,” Adeyemi noted.

There is about a 40 percent cement supply gap, according to Dangote Group, the largest producer of the commodity with over 60 percent share of the market. Devakumar Edwin, Dangote Group executive director, strategy, portfolio development and capital projects, was quoted recently as saying that manufacturers were working to close the gap.

Edwin attributed the increase in demand to increase in construction activities as investors considered the industry good to hedge against falling local currency. Edwin, who spoke at an event in Lagos, insisted that their ex-depot price had not changed but that some retailers had taken advantage of the supply gap to increase their prices.

He also mentioned devaluation of the naira and the increase in Value Added Tax as reasons for the increase in the cost of critical components such as gas, gypsum, bags and machine spare parts.

The implication of these price increases is far-reaching. “The dream of an average Nigeria to own a home is now very slim. For us as developers, it is a huge challenge because we already have the prices of houses that are still being built. We cannot deliver at that price anymore,” Adeyemi said.

Continuing, he said, “I foresee doom because some developers may be forced to compromise on quality and standards of houses they put on the market. They may go for sub-standard materials in a bid to meet up with supply and that simply foretells housing collapse and construction failure.”

He canvassed the government’s intervention through what he called price control policy that will effectively regulate the price of the commodity, saying the government should also break the monopoly in the supply of the product which, he reasoned, was part of the causes of the product scarcity.

culled from businessdaydotng
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 7:20am On Dec 16, 2021
Now, one thing I tell everyone is learn about real estate. Repeat after me: real estate provides the highest returns, the greatest values and the least risk.
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 6:50pm On Apr 23, 2022
Viktoreze:
“If you don’t own a home, buy one. If you own a home, buy another one. If you own two homes, buy a third. And, lend your relatives the money to buy a home.”
John Paulson, investor and multi-billionaire.
Re: What Rising Insecurity,Material Prices Mean For Building Industry, Homeownership by Viktoreze(m): 12:57am On May 27, 2022
“It’s tangible, it’s solid, it’s beautiful. It’s artistic, from my standpoint, and I just love real estate.” ~Donald Trump

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