Building Plans September 2014

A total of 301 building plans to the value of N$142.11m were approved by the City of Windhoek in September 2014. On a year‑to‑date basis (January to September), 2,258 plans were approved compared to 2,484 plans over the same period last year. In value terms, however, plans approved year-to-date are worth N$1,837.1bn compared to N$1,711.1bn for the same period in 2013, up 7.4%. This increase is mostly due to three large commercial projects that were approved by the municipality in February 2014. On a monthly basis, a few more plans were approved in September when compared to August, while the value of plans approved is down 24.9% m/m. The difference in value is mainly because less expensive commercial and industrial projects were approved in September.

Should the year-to-date trend of the value of plans approved be maintained for the remainder of the year (illustrated by the red dashed line in the graph above), 2014 will most likely be equivalent to the record 2012 year. Ignoring monthly volatility, the trend implies that there is an average of N$167m worth of building plans per month, which will match 2012.

In our view, the construction sector will be one of the leading growth and development sectors in the Namibian economy for 2014, with both private sector and government having aggressive development plans. However, many such plans fall out of the Windhoek municipal area, and as such are not captured in the monthly building plan statistics.

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PSCE August 2014

Overall

Credit extended to the private sector increased by N$944.3m, or 1.48%, in August 2014, taking total credit outstanding to N$64.9 billion. On an annual basis PSCE growth picked up by 0.8 percentage points, to 16.3%. As such, a net total of N$9.70 billion worth of credit has been extended over the last year. This is the highest level of net issuance seen over a 12 month period in the history of the country, as high growth continues to be seen off an ever increasing base. Of this N$9.70bn, approximately N$4.03bn was issued to businesses, while N$5.57bn was taken up by individuals.

Credit extension to households

Credit extension to households expanded by 1.2% on a monthly basis and 14.2% on an annual basis in August, a slightly slower rate of growth than was seen in the preceding month. The growth in credit extension to households can be largely ascribed to prolonged and historically low interest rates in Namibia, allowing for the relatively cheap uptake of credit by interest sensitive households.

With the exception of leasing transactions and other claims all the sub categories in household credit grew on a month on month basis. The largest growth was seen in overdrafts which expanded by 2.75%, followed by instalment credit which rose 1.57% month on month. Mortgage credit is still by far the biggest component of credit extended to households contributing N$2.8 billion of the N$4.9 billion increase seen for the year and N$300 million on a month on month basis. This is largely due to households taking advantage of the low borrowing costs currently in play.

Instalment credit makes up the second largest component of credit extended to households (16.3%) and is also the second quickest growing component as stated above. Installment credit is often used to purchase consumer goods and could be seen as a non-productive utilization of credit. If this number continues rising in a rising interest rate cycle it could put pressure on household financial health.

Credit extension to corporates

Credit extension to corporates grew by 19.7% year-on-year in August, up from 17.2% in July. On a monthly basis all the sub-categories grew except for other loans and advances which fell slightly. Leasing transactions grew by the biggest percentage (7.7%) but represents only 0.9% of the credit extended to corporations. Overdrafts grew by 3.4% for the month after declining in the previous month. Mortgage loans, the largest component of credit extended to corporations, grew by 2.4% for the month. Overall for the month credit extended to corporations rose 1.9%.

Money Supply and Reserves 

Foreign reserves declined by 7.0% month on month in August after declining by 7.2% month on month for July. This is quite a significant drop from the high of January, from N$18.6 billion in January to N$13.7 billion in August.

Annual M2 growth decreased to 8.4% in August, down from growth of 10.3% in July. Although growth in M2 slowed it can still be considered reasonable with only the transferable deposits component falling slightly.

Looking forward we expect to see further strong credit growth despite an anticipation of rate hikes towards the end of the year. Real income growth is expected to remain elevated given the expansive economic conditions that are still prevalent within Namibia which will continue to reinforce demand for credit.

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