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reported yesterday the boost that the Lagos
State government is giving to the housing sector through its Home Ownership
Mortgage System (H.O.M.S). Well it appears there is more cash injection on the way.
BusinessDay’s Charles Uroko writes on other new developments:
Expectation
high as NMRC, PMBs bring liquidity to mortgage market in 2014
Among
prospective homeowners and real estate investors, expectation is high that
access to housing finance would increase significantly in 2014 as the primary
mortgage banks (PMBs) conclude their recapitalisation today and the Nigerian
Mortgage Refinance Company (NMRC) commences operation in a couple of months
from now.
The
Nigerian mortgage market is enmeshed in a deficit that analysts estimate to be
over N20 trillion, which explains the high housing deficit and low
homeownership level among the people, especially those in the low-income group.
With
$300 million from the World Bank plus expected contributions from other
stakeholders including the mortgage banks, Mortgage Banking Association of
Nigeria (MBAN), Federal Ministry of Finance, International Finance Corporation
(IFC), among others, it is expected that NMRC would provide the much-needed
long-term funds that would be loaned out at low interest rate to home-seekers.
Added
to this is the mode of operation of the company which will involve refinancing
the mortgages that would be originated by the mortgage institutions, thereby
making loanable funds available to primary lenders.
Apart
from individuals who aspire to own homes through mortgage financing, some
government institutions and/or agencies also have their aspirations of what to
get from the mortgage market in the new year. One of such agencies is the
Financial Systems Strategy (FSS2020).
FSS2020
is Federal Government’s financial think-tank for Vision 2020 when Nigeria
dreams to join the 20 largest economies of the world. It aspires to see a
mortgage market in the country that would have, by 2020, provided access to
housing finance to over 30 percent of Nigerians in all social classes in urban
centres to own their own houses.
FSS2020’s
vision is to have one of the safest, highest homeownership rates and most
profitable mortgage markets among the emerging economies, while its mission is
to use mortgage market as a major agent of positive social and economic change
by making mortgage finance available and affordable to all classes of
Nigerians.
In
line with this, FSS also aspires to have a mortgage market that has multiple
long-term funding sources including full integration with the Nigerian capital
market where the value of listed mortgage-backed securities will be at 20
percent of the market capitalisation of equities.
Oluwatoyin
Jokosenumi, FSS2020 deputy director at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), who
disclosed this at a mortgage bankers’ conference in Lagos, added that their
mortgage market growth strategy foresees a market that would account for
15 percent of the gross domestic product of the country.
Speaking
on the topic ‘Secondary Mortgage Market for Effective Financing of Affordable
Housing in Nigeria: The Role of Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN)’,
Jokosenumi envisaged a mortgage market that would stimulate construction
activities with attendant multipliers, and provide up to 10 percent of the
population with jobs.
He
pointed out, however, that for market to witness this change, there must be
some paradigm shifts, explaining that access to housing finance should grow
from present level of 0.5 percent to 30 percent over the next 10 years, which
is what both NMRC and PMBs are supposed to provide.
On
his part, Taba Peterside, general manager, Listings Sales & Retention,
Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), noted that despite the present challenges, the
Nigerian mortgage market has huge opportunities and bright growth outlook.
Peterside,
who spoke on ‘The New Capital Base as a Catalyst for Mortgage Banking Growth:
The Role of the Nigerian Stock Exchange’, noted that, like other emerging
economies, the increase in housing requirements in Nigeria is driven by
economic expansion, growing population and urbanisation of major cities.
“PMBs
could grow beyond the issues of inadequate funding, as well as harness the huge
opportunities in the industry through listing,” he said, pointing out that
growth outlook for the sector could be seen in the impending take-off of the
NMRC; N56 trillion financing requirement, and Nigeria’s population of over
160 million people.
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