Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa March 2016 | Seite 15

COVER STORY E conomic growth is under severe pressure in South Africa leaving many investors with limited options in purchasing long-term investments. 2016 could see South Africa entering another recession and a ratings downgrade to junk status as an investment destination is possible. Stanlib’s chief economist, Kevin Lings says that “South Africa’s economy is barely growing. While the country managed 1.3% growth last year, it is set for 0.5% growth this year and unemployment remains very high. The consumer held up last year and salaries rose on average at 7.6% with retail sales growth of 3.3%. 2016 could is looking to be a tough year for the consumer.” According to Andrew Rissik, Managing Director of Sable Forex, the rand does not move in isolation. “Internationally, there is a lot of uncertainty affecting how the Rand does against established currencies like the Pound and the Dollar. In Britain, David Cameron is trying to persuade fellow conservatives that the UK should remain in the EU. While in America, concerns are rising over an election that billionaire Donald Trump may just snatch” he says. The effect of this is that more and more local investors have begun moving their money offshore. The listed property sector has tended to move closely in line with bonds as both are income-generating investments. When interest rates rise, such as they may in the US in the coming years, bond yields rise and prices of bonds and property fall. South Africa’s Investor Exodus South Africa is currently experiencing a huge exodus of foreign investors who have seen the plunge in the rand’s value rapidly eroding their stock and bond returns. Africa’s largest economy has sucked in huge investments in the past two decades, but also has one of the world’s biggest balance of payments deficits – over 6 percent of its economy – and depends almost fully on portfolio capital to plug the gap. Now a combination of domestic policy fears and structural problems along with a poor global trade and investment climate is weighing heavily on the country’s currency. South African stocks and bonds have been a magnet for foreigners who now own a third of the bond market and up to half the equity free float in Johannesburg, which is home to multinationals like SabMiller and Anglo-American and remains close to record highs. A record 93 billion rand ($10 billion) www.reimag.co.za flooded into the country last year, when South Africa became only the fourth emerging economy to enter Citi’s key global bond index. But a ballooning deficit, sluggish 2-3 percent growth and fears of erratic policy before 2014 elections are weighing heavily on the rand which has lost 8 percent this year versus the dollar and a fifth of its value since early-2012. Investor exits tend to pick up when returns turn negative and the rand is now perilously near the 9.30 per dollar rate, that analysts at UBS reckon is the “pain threshold” at which longer-term bond returns will tip into the red. “You are seeing rand weakness eating away investors’ returns,” says Manik Narain, who co-authored the UBS report. He estimates the average rand exchange rate was 7.70 per dollar over the past four years when most bond investors entered the market. Cumulative returns during this time amounted to 20 percent according to UBS calculations. “Another 1-2 percent loss on the rand could see them exit positions altogether,” Narain adds. Rand weakness also ties the hands of the Reserve Bank of South Africa (SARB), preventing it from offering the economy vital monetary stimulus. The SARB left interest rates on hold this week, noting the currency’s propensity to “overshoot”. Important factors to consider when investing in offshore property • What is the supply /demand curve for properties in the jurisdiction? • How strong is the rental market? Is there a constant supply of tenants looking for properties? • How liquid is the market in the event that you want to sell your investment? • How does the legal framework protect your investment while you own the property? Investing offshore as a South African The events of the closing months of 2015, and the volatile political landscape of 2016 have given South African investors more reasons than ever to move their money offshore. Typically, South African investors are taking one of two routes when moving their money into offshore property MARCH 2016 SA Real Estate Investor 13