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Cost of funds, land policies hold lock to mid-low income home ownership
- Thursday, 02 May 2013
- Olanrewaju Yewande
Experts in the housing sector have said that home seekers within middle and low income bracket find it difficult, and sometimes impossible, to realise their dream of owning homes because of the cost of funds and land policies in Nigeria.
They explain that at 19-22 percent interest rate charged on loans from mortgage banks, this class of people cannot afford such loans, more-so as their monthly income are generally poor.
According to them, housing loan mostly come in form of mortgage that attracts low interest rate and long repayment tenor which, they note, does not exist in real terms in Nigeria at the moment.
Anthony Owuye, managing director and chief executive officer of Personal Trust Savings and Loans Limited, however, told BusinessDay that an added challenge to housing delivery in the country is an unfriendly mortgage environment.
“The major challenge to housing development here is that the system is not really geared towards mortgage banking. Mortgage system is supposed to be a long term thing, but our economy has been operating on a short day-to-day basis. It has been a short term economy for a long time”, he said.
“In an inflationary high interest rate environment, it is difficult to create a mortgage because the borrower will not be able to pay back at two-digit and short tenor interest rate”, he added, pointing out that the Land Use Act is mortgage unfriendly while the legal environment for recovery called foreclosure is mortgage hostile.
Continuing, he said, “Assuming you take care of all these, to now develop the housing on which mortgage is to be created, it poses another level of challenges because the infrastructure is not there. A developer spends much money providing the roads, water, electricity and more. At the end of the day, the housing units you want to create at affordable cost become unaffordable”.
Owuye noted that by the time you put all your costs together, the house goes beyond the reach of the ordinary person to whom mortgage finance is directed, adding that Nigeria is a society where there is less than one percent of persons who can afford their own housing without recourse to mortgage.
Adeniyi Akinlusi, MD/CEO, City Trust Mortgage Bank, former Intercontinental Homes Plc, agrees, adding that many Nigerian households cannot afford to own homes because of high interest rate on housing loans.
Land policies including building approvals, land use charge, Certificate of Occupancy and governor’s consent, the experts add, are also major impediments to homeownership by people in middle and low income group.
Real estate developers frequently complain of excessive charges on land by state governments, blaming the provisions of the Land Use Act which places ownership of land on state governors for their woes.
This explains the position of Jide Awosode, the president and CEO of Grant Properties, who says the only condition for him to build low cost housing is for government to give him land free of charge or at a huge concession.
Awosode maintains that low income housing is the business of government, explaining that lack of infrastructure and cost of building make that segment of the market unattractive to private developers.
Culled from: BusinessDay Newspaper
Lagos, developer plan Badagry’s Hannah Garden
- Monday, 18 February 2013
- 3Invest Intelligence

Plans to commence construction works on the proposed Hannah’s Garden, a 260 housing units estate, are on the top gear, as the developer last week revealed that the project would kick-start by the end of March 2013.
The Hannah’s Garden Estate is planned for Ganyingbo area of Badagry, Lagos State.
The proposed mass housing project, to be executed by Messrs Xpress Property Services Ventures Limited (XPSVL), in collaboration with the Lagos State Ministry of Housing under a Private Public Partnership (PPP) initiative, is to produce 260 “affordable housing units’ for the populace.
Read more...Ogun ready to work with building industry groups
- Monday, 11 February 2013
- 3Invest Intelligence

The Ogun State Government is ready to collaborate with relevant stakeholders in the building industry to create an environment that will not only enhance good living, but also help to further transform the state into an investment hub.
The Commissioner for Physical Planning, Alhaji Adebayo Fari, made the pledge in Abeokuta while hosting members of the state chapter of the Nigerian Institution of Surveyors led by the Chairman, Mr. Adeniji Adegunle.
Read more...Ogun, Wemabod collaborate on affordable housing
- Monday, 18 February 2013
- Guardian

Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, has expressed the readiness of his administration to work with genuine investors to provide affordable housing for the citizens.
Amosun said this on Wednesday in Abeokuta while receiving the board members of Wemabod Estates Limited, a subsidiary of the Odu’a Group of Companies, led by the chairman, Dr. Ismail Adewusi, in his office.
The governor, according to a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media, Mrs. Funmi Wakama, said housing was one of the basic necessities of human beings, pointing out that “being able to meet this need provides us a sane environment”.
Read more...Dangote Reopens Gboko Cement Plant
- Sunday, 03 February 2013
- VA

3INVESTONLINE – Africa’s largest cement producer Dangote Cement Plc, Friday announced the reopening of its Gboko Cement Plant in Benue State, Nigeria, closed down as a result of the glut in the domestic cement market.
In an official statement, the company disclosed that the decision to reopen the plant was reached on Thursday in Abuja, immediately after a meeting between the Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan and the Chairman of Dangote Cement Alhaji Aliko Dangote.
Giving reasons for the reopening, a source from Dangote Cement said, “Since the shutdown of the Gboko Cement Plant, Government has been engaging local cement manufacturers in discussions, trying to find solutions to the challenges facing the industry.
According to the source, Aliko Dangote was in an upbeat mood after the meeting with the president and in appreciation of the President’s concern and willingness to intervene; he gave immediate directives to restart operations at the Gboko Plant.
In December, Dangote temporarily suspended production activities at its Gboko Plant which accounts for four million metric tonnes yearly while staffs were asked to proceed on compulsory leave as a result of continued importation of subsidised cement into the country.
“…with the dumping of subsidised imported cement in the South eastern market, there is no way our Gboko Cement plant can survive. In fact, members of staff have been put on forced leave pending when the situation improves,” Anthony Chiejina, Group Head, Corporate Communication, Dangote Group, told BBC.
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