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Thinking Outside The box (Overseas Investment Series)
Cde Monomotapa
#381 Posted : Friday, July 15, 2011 7:16:40 PM
Rank: Chief

Joined: 1/13/2011
Posts: 5,964
I admire Ecobank. A true definition of a Pan-african investment.
young
#382 Posted : Saturday, July 16, 2011 12:45:26 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/20/2007
Posts: 2,074
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
DATABANK BFUND 2010 ANNUAL REPORT

http://www.databankgroup...UND%20REPORT%202010.pdf


The wazua spirit as members is to educate and inform and learn from others within the limit of what we know in any chosen area irrespective of our differences in tribes, nationalities, etc. .
young
#383 Posted : Saturday, July 16, 2011 5:29:42 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/20/2007
Posts: 2,074
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
REAL ESTATE THINGS ARE LOOKING UP IN GHANA

Discerning investors have long discovered that if one can get an acre of land in a prime location in Accra, and pay even US$500,000 to US$1 million for it, one can put up between 6-10 single-family homes on it, sell them for more than US$2 million and make a tidy profit in less than two years. And this practice has placed excessive demand pressure on prime lands in Accra, and also increased the rents of ordinary people in most suburbs
of Accra. Ghana’s upmarket housing sector continues to grow quickly and keeps attracting more investment from both local and foreign companies. The recent signing of a US$10 billion housing deal between the government and the South Korea-based real estate developer STX, is seen as the needed catalyst to open up more business opportunities at the lower end of the property market, for flats or apartments priced in the US$30,000 to US$60,000 range, and bring more vibrancy and growth to the housing sector.

The government’s active involvement in the housing sector in 2010 has already started motivating the private sector to show interest. Even some labour unions are considering putting their member dues into real estate investments.

The Ghana Real Estate Developers Association (GREDA) is planning a massive housing project and has asked government for some concessions. GREDA wants the government to grant it a sovereign guarantee for securing the funding to construct 300,000 units of housing estimated at a total cost of US$7billion over the next decade.

In addition, the association wants tax exemptions on imported materials for construction.

Before the government had the time to consider GREDA’s proposal, the National Association of Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT) announced plans to build a housing project for its members and has called on the government to grant it similar concessions as requested by GREDA.

If the government heeds calls by these groups, granting tax waivers and specific construction concessions, the floodgates will open. Members of various labour unions and other entities currently bear the brunt of exorbitant rent charges from landlords who take advantage of the supply shortfall to charge usurious fees for their heavily sought-after accommodations.

According to Kojo Addo-Kuffour, CEO of a local mortgage company, Ghana Home Loans, even if these new developments planned across the country came to fruition, they would hardly meet the growing demand, a significant part of which comes from the increasing number of middle income earners in the country and Ghanaians resident abroad who are returning home or want second homes in Ghana.

Various experts, including GREDA and the Ministry of Water Resources, Works and Housing, put annual demand for home units at about 100,000 units. On the supply side, all efforts by developers put together hardly add up to 70,000 units annually on average, leaving an annual shortfall of about 30,000 units.




With Ghana's GDP destined to cross the 10% per annum bar in 2011 for the first time in the country's history, the economic performance that is spurring that growth can only keep the housing sector continuing to boil for the foreseeable future.



Presenting the government’s budget for 2011 to parliament last November for debate and approval, the Finance and Economic Planning Minister, Dr. Kwabena Duffour, told the nation that “Ghana faces an acute housing deficit of one million units especially in the urban centres. The cost of housing and other infrastructural development is excessively high as most of the materials used are imported. However, there exist abundant raw materials which can be used in the construction industry to reduce import content.”

Duffour added that the government was seeking to ensure that by the year 2015 at least 60% of the raw materials used in the construction industry would be indigenous to reduce the nation’s import bill. According to him, a housing policy programme on the utilisation of local building materials such as clay brick and tiles, pozzolana cement and bamboo in the building industry has already been prepared on the initiative of government.

All previous governments of Ghana have recognised housing as one of the important infrastructural developments necessary for economic growth. But it is also widely known that the heart of the challenge of reducing Ghana’s housing deficit is issues related to land acquisition and the price of land.

A study by the International Housing Coalition presented at the World Urban Forum held in Vancouver, Canada in June 2006, sheds more light on the issue of land in Ghana: “Land prices in Accra prohibit about 65% of the population from entering the housing market. Land values, for instance, in East Legon, a suburb in the capital, are between $40,000 and $60,000 per residential plot with serviced lands in Tema selling for about $15,000 to $18,000 per plot.”

“In Kumasi, the second largest city, urban land prices range from $20,000 to $40,000 for un-serviced land close to major road networks,” the report said. “You also have to remember that there are land title problems in Ghana, especially in Accra. And outside Accra, the challenge you would face as a developer is the infrastructure that will allow the people (who buy the property) to commute,” says Oko Omaboe, CEO of Nowak, a private developer, famous for delivering 10 executive houses in nine months to accommodate African heads of states who attended the 2007 African Union (AU) summit in Accra. “So it is not just about being able to put a large number of houses up. There is also infrastructure that goes with it and that is not going to be borne by any developer. That lies at the doorstep of the government,” Omoboe adds.

Despite the challenges private developers face, many remain buoyant about the sector and continue to invest more. The figures for the first half of 2010 from the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) show significant increases in investments targeted at the upper middle class population.
Notable among them, is a US$3.5 million investment by Soroma Ghana Funds for the construction of luxury apartment-style residences.

Omoboe shares his excitement about the market: “We have sold quite well, off-plan (before completion). Our customer target is anybody who wants to buy good quality property in Accra. Out of the number we have sold so far, I would say about 87% were bought by Ghanaians living here in Ghana.”
Given the apparent willingness of the government to give appetising incentives to foreign property developers in order to attract external capital, should local developers succeed in getting the same or similar sweeteners, there could be a property development explosion in Ghana which would certainly increase the housing stock. That, in turn, would lead to a cooling of the price appreciation in property values in the last ten years.

As foreign investors continue to flock to Ghana in search of high returns, and more airlines ferry them to Ghana, many are deciding to stay and begin exploring accommodation options. If even 5% of the estimated 2 million Ghanaians resident overseas decide to return permanently to Ghana, that would mean an immediate need for up to 50,000 new homes. With Ghana’s GDP destined to cross the 10% per annum bar in 2011 for the first time in the country’s history, the economic performance that is spurring that growth can only keep the housing sector continuing to boil for the foreseeable future.






The wazua spirit as members is to educate and inform and learn from others within the limit of what we know in any chosen area irrespective of our differences in tribes, nationalities, etc. .
young
#384 Posted : Sunday, July 31, 2011 3:30:00 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/20/2007
Posts: 2,074
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
Ghana Bourse


Four advancers caused a 23bps gain in the level of the GSE Composite Index. On its first day of listing on the local bourse, Tullow Oil inched up by 26bps (Tullow Oil Plc. listed 3.531m newly issued shares on the Ghana Stock Exchange); the other gainers were UT Bank (+278bps), Cocoa Processing Co. (confectionaries, +50%) and SG-SSB (+204bps). CAL Bank and HFC Bank were however in the red with a loss of 357bps and 286bps respectively. UT Bank and Cocoa Processing Co. traded high volumes representing 79% of total executed trades (1.33m shades); turnover was GHø636,099. The Index was quoted at 1,180.56 points and has returned 18.06% (13.77% in dollar terms). In company news, Benso Oil Palm Plantation (agribusiness) and Ecobank Ghana released their earnings for the period ended
The wazua spirit as members is to educate and inform and learn from others within the limit of what we know in any chosen area irrespective of our differences in tribes, nationalities, etc. .
young
#385 Posted : Wednesday, February 15, 2012 1:09:10 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/20/2007
Posts: 2,074
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
KASOA (GHANA) REAL ESTATE BOOM IN THE OFFING
Kasoa is a confluence town in Ghana that connects the Central Region (Capital Cape Coast) to Accra.
Kasoa Accra route has the highest vehicular traffic (4,100 vehicles per hour) in Ghana. The road is extremely bad a bumpy two lane road. It takes 4 hours to commute from Kasoa to central accra a distance of 60 Kilometers. It is really a nightmare !!!.

The journey follows this path :-

Kasoa ---->Mallam------>Accra.

Two things will make sleepy Kasoa real estate to explode in years ahead.

(i) The completion of Mallam-Accra (tetter Quarshie interchange) 6 lane expressway which is to be officially declared open today 15th Feb 2012 by President Mills:-


www.ghana.gov.gh/.../110...-mallam-road-opens-today

http://gbcghana.com/index.php?id=1.772729


(ii) The Commencement of BRT (Bus Rapid Transport System) from Accra to Kasoa, the first pilot scheme in Ghana a world bank project partly funded by Ghana government :-

www.modernghana.com/.../...issions-us90m-brt-pro...

This project commenced in Feb 2011 and it is expected to be completed in Q1 2013.

DERIVERABLES
Kasoa to Accra will take only 25 minutes rather than the usual 4 hours. With this infrastructure in place there will be upward spiral swing effect in Kasoa real estate.


The biggest and the most reliable real estate agent that has positioned in Kasoa is 21st Century Construction limited the developers of Kasoa Millenium City.

At the moment a 100ft X 80 ft plot costs cost 6,000 ghana cedis about 285K Ksh PAYABLE BY INSTALLMENTS OVER 30 MONTHS.
The smallest house is a 2 bedroom bungalow costs 47,000 Ghana Cedis about 2.2 Million Ksh payable over one year.

Last year (early 2011) a plot cost 4,800 Ghana Cedis and two bedroom bungalow was 37,000 Ghana Cedis.

For more info check out :-

http://www.milleniumcitygh.com/






The wazua spirit as members is to educate and inform and learn from others within the limit of what we know in any chosen area irrespective of our differences in tribes, nationalities, etc. .
pariah
#386 Posted : Monday, March 26, 2012 4:03:18 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 11/24/2011
Posts: 833
@young would you do a post on the 101 of investing in North American markets?
wilyum
#387 Posted : Monday, March 26, 2012 12:15:28 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 12/21/2011
Posts: 1,010
@young,would give mi u r email address,got a question for u in lagos. thxs
young
#388 Posted : Saturday, March 31, 2012 10:15:37 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/20/2007
Posts: 2,074
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
pariah wrote:
@young would you do a post on the 101 of investing in North American markets?


Investment concept is universal my friend.

But when investing in North American Market avoid
penny stocks. In general have no business with penny stocks in any market.
The wazua spirit as members is to educate and inform and learn from others within the limit of what we know in any chosen area irrespective of our differences in tribes, nationalities, etc. .
young
#389 Posted : Saturday, March 31, 2012 10:17:51 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/20/2007
Posts: 2,074
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
wilyum wrote:
@young,would give mi u r email address,got a question for u in lagos. thxs



Let me have your email rather and I will send mine to you.
The wazua spirit as members is to educate and inform and learn from others within the limit of what we know in any chosen area irrespective of our differences in tribes, nationalities, etc. .
wilyum
#390 Posted : Saturday, March 31, 2012 10:22:49 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 12/21/2011
Posts: 1,010
young wrote:
Quote:

wilyum wrote:
Quote:

@young,would give mi u r email address,got a question for u in lagos. thxs



Let me have your email rather and I will send mine to you.

wilyumv at gmail, thxs
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