Search
Close this search box.

Residential rental sector showing real signs of renewal

MAIN IMAGE: Waldo Marcus, Head of Marketing and Sales at TPN Credit Bureau

Staff writer

The residential rental sector started to show real signs of renewal in the fourth quarter of 2021 with key national property indicators revealing that the sector is through the worst of the economic storm, according to TPN Credit Bureau’s Residential Rental Monitor.

Based on the current trajectory, a further recovery is expected during 2022. However, tenants are likely to continue to be under pressure.

“Low inflation and the need to stimulate a fragile local economy during the pandemic resulted in historically low prime interest rates. One of the consequences of this was a perception of cheap capital and artificial demand, “says  Waldo Marcus, Head of Marketing and Sales at TPN Credit Bureau.

“This, combined with an increased number of distressed estates and human capital migration, created an over-supply of property in some areas and, in complete contrast, hyped demand in previously ignored locations of South Africa. As historical trends have shown, this imbalance will have to correct itself in time.

“The low number of property transfer that occurred in 2020 was no surprise. A bigger surprise is that 2021 recorded an even lower number of property transfers,” he said.

According to Marcus another concerning trend was the decline of cash property purchases, even though financial institutions are still providing home loans.

While the economy grew 1.2% in real terms during the fourth quarter of 2021, this growth did not translate into job creation. Unemployment, the biggest challenge facing South Africa, reached a record high of 35.3% in Q4 of 2021. However, while full time employment decreased, part time employment grew by 16.5%. These trends are likely to impact the residential rental market.

Encouragingly, TPN’s Residential Rental Monitor reveals that nationally, the number of tenants in good standing continued to improve. Tenants in good standing are those whose accounts have been settled in full by the end of the month including any arrears.

At the end of 2021, 81.4% of tenants nationally were in good standing. On average, the percentage of tenants in good standing has been improving since the hard lockdown low of Q2 in 2020.

Some rental bands are not yet on the road to recovery. The below R4 500 rental band, for example, continued to struggle to break through the 80% good standing mark. The number of tenants renting in the below R3 000 category are struggling to make any sort of rental payment with the number of tenants who made no payment remaining stubbornly high at just under 17%.

“In addition to the lower rental collection, units below R3000 were also standing vacant with a recorded vacancy rate of 14.42% in the fourth quarter of 2021. Tenants who did not pay in the below R3 000 rental band have been increasing steadily since 2014.

“The best performing rental segment were those renting for R7 000 to R12 000 per month with 87.29% in good standing. This rental band also delivered the lowest did not pay number at just 4.2%.

Tenants paying a monthly rental of between R12 000 and R25 000 were the second-best performers with 86.10% in good standing and only 4.71% falling into the did not pay category. This sector of the rental market had the lowest vacancy rate of all rental bands at just 10.23%,”Marcus explained.

Luxury property rentals above R25 000 per month had a good standing of just under 80%. This  category had the highest percentage of tenants who paid in a grace period at 5.81%.

From a provincial perspective Gauteng did not break through the 80% good standing mark and struggled with the highest did not pay percentage of all provinces.

Western Cape is performing well and has the second-best number of tenants in good standing at 85.99%, while KwaZulu-Natal achieved the second highest average residential rental per square metre for sectional title and the second highest average sectional title property value, second only to the Western Cape in the fourth quarter.

Although the Eastern Cape has yet to recover to its pre-pandemic good standing levels, it has consistently maintained a good standing above the national average.

The Free State’s good standing was just above the national average at 83.3% as at the end of 2021. While rental payments in Bloemfontein are the healthiest of the major cities at 84.26%, full title property yields are the lowest of the major cities. Full title property values in the province have remained flat since 2017.

The Northern Cape is a star performer with the best good standing ratio in the country at 87.76%. The province boasts the lowest did not pay category in the country at only 3.29%.

Marcus said all indications are that the property sector is through the worst of the pandemic induced crisis and showing signs of recovery, landlords need to be aware that tenants will continue to be placed under pressure because of rising interest rates, geopolitical events fanning the flames of inflation, persistently high unemployment and more recently, the floods in KwaZulu-Natal which all impact economic growth.

“The rental market may see an increase in risk as more consumers come to rely on part time income streams to address the rising cost of living. It will become increasingly difficult to rely solely on employment status to determine tenant risk in the foreseeable future as tenants require innovative new ways to make and supplement their incomes,” he concluded.

Share this article:

more top news stories

Grant Smee

Acquiring a global footprint

Only Realty’s Grant Smee talks acquisition strategy (12 real estate companies in three years), expanding offshore, and the importance of collaboration.