Tough times continue for homeowners and the property market in South Africa

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Property experts react to the MPC’s fifth rate hold in South Africa, highlighting the sobering implications for the market.

The Monetary Policy Committee has voted to keep interest rates unchanged – and while it was expected and an indication that rates are unlikely to move higher, it still means that indebted South Africans will continue to service their repayments with rates at 15-year highs.

Samuel Seeff, chairman of the Seeff Property Group, noted there has been a notable decline in sales volumes since the middle of last year, and price growth has stalled to just about under 1%, which is not a great incentive for sellers. Rates remain at their highest point in 15 years, as the fallout from the global financial crisis has weighed on the local currency.

“There is no universe in which that math computes to anything but a disaster for households that are already overburdened by debt.” “Inflation is not at current levels because people are spending wildly and recklessly. It is higher because of the weak rand, high fuel prices and high food prices.

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