Atlantic Seaboard – Nox Property shares stats on the short-term letting boom | Everything Property
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Atlantic Seaboard – Nox Property shares stats on the short-term letting boom

Nox Property Cape Town Atlantic Seaboard

Nox Property predicts that interest in properties along Cape Town’s Atlantic Seaboard will continue to rise.

Cape Town’s Atlantic Seaboard is experiencing some of the highest capital growth ever seen in South Africa offering homeowners incredible returns on their investment properties. This is according to Nox Property, who share more below.

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A recent report revealed rental prices on the Atlantic Seaboard to be around 15% more expensive than other regions in South Africa and growing at a rate of 9.7% per year. With demand driving up prices it’s not only locals who are looking for places to rent. Tourists who previously only visited for a few short weeks of the year during the peak season are now looking to spend two to four months every year in Cape Town. Factors like remote working, the experience economy and the depreciating Rand are contributing to this trend.

Nox Property, a premium residential property management and sales company based in Camps Bay, reports that as at 1 September, 2024, there are 11,392 Active Listings in Cape Town’s CBD and Atlantic Seaboard market. The market has seen supply growth of 17% over the past 12 months with an average RevPAR (Revenue Per Available Room) of R1,910.00. This gives a market size of around R8.5 billion.

Attractive investment destination

Nox Property co-founder Richard Marshall says, “Tourism in Cape Town has made a remarkable recovery and is almost back to pre-Covid levels. According to Stats SA, air arrivals in Cape Town recorded a 13% year-on-year increase over the period January to April 2024, reaching 405,021, of which 91% were from overseas markets. Considering all the awards and accolades Cape Town is receiving along with our great weather, stunning landscapes and high-quality restaurants and attractions, it’s no wonder foreigners and semigrators from Gauteng and KZN see Cape Town as an attractive real estate investment destination. This coupled with a more favourable interest rate will certainly attract more buyers.”

Of the R2.5 billion AUM (Assets Under Management) in their portfolio, spanning the entire Atlantic Seaboard, Nox reveals that one in every 20 buyers purchase with the intent to live in their property and that the split between foreign and locally owned property is 55% foreign and 45% local, with the exception of Camps Bay. Here 62.5% of properties are locally owned.

Market share of property sales

Nox holds a 10% market share of property sales in Camps Bay and Clifton. Between January to June 2024, they sold 43 properties. The average sale price of a freestanding residential property was listed at R17million, with the highest sale being R54million and the lowest, R9 million. Freestanding sectional title properties such as townhouses and apartments averaged at around R9million with the highest sale being R26 million and the lowest R2.4 million. The length of time properties remain on the market range between 107 days for sectional title properties and 126 days for freestanding properties.

“Properties at R20 million and above are mostly owned by foreigners looking for a lifestyle asset rather than a return. With the depreciating rand the capital growth is typically in line with inflation. These homeowners often spend several months of the year at their property and for the remaining months list it as short-term letting. Four-bedroom homes start at around R11 000 per night with five-bedroom homes at R22 000 per night.”

“The income derived from short-term letting is used to support the holding costs of the asset (utilities, municipal taxes, holiday spending money, etc.). Properties under R20 million generally see a nett rental yield (post all costs) of between 6% and 8%, which is very dependent on the property itself as well as the capital financing structure.” Comments Marshall.

Not only does short-term letting provide homeowners with the opportunity to capitalise on their investment, it also offers anyone involved in the management of the property the chance to earn an income. For short-term lets this could be cleaning staff, chefs, babysitters and masseuses and to maintain the property it requires the services of plumbers, electricians, handymen, gardeners, even interior designers and builders, should renovation work be necessary.

“Nox’s property management division has 172 employees of which 120 are housekeeping staff. We provide housekeeping services six days a week in every property we manage and through just our housekeeping staff we contribute in the region of R10 million annually to their payroll and, in turn, the broader economy. We receive in the region of 100 CV’s per month from housekeepers looking for work. I am unsure of just how big the labour pool is but with 200 properties under management at Nox that means the ratio of housekeepers to a property is one to two on average.”

Considering SARB could further reduce rates by another 50 basis points in November 2024, taking the repo rate to 7.5% by year-end, Nox predicts interest in properties especially along the Atlantic Seaboard will continue to rise.

“With lower interest rates properties will increase in value further fuelling investors’ decisions to buy a property with an intention to let. Until a decision is made on what the short-term rental regulations will be, this is not a market we see slowing down anytime soon.” Concludes Marshall.

For more information, visit Nox Property.

Nox holds a 10% market share of property sales in Camps Bay and Clifton.

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