• Monday, November 25, 2024
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Banana Island land value defies economy, rises 100% in 3 yrs

Reduction in cost of governance: A step towards economic prudence

Despite the swings in the Nigerian economy, with all the macro-economic indicators beating analysts’ expectations and predictions, there has been an astronomical rise in the average asking prices for land across the upper end of the Lagos real estate market.

Banana Island, Nigeria’s most expensive neighbourhood to date, leads the pack of neighbourhoods in that class where land value has defied the poor state of the economy and gone up significantly.

In the last three years, the price of land in Banana Island has moved from N600,000 per square metre pre-COVID-19 to about N1.3 million, representing a little above 100 percent increase.

Udo Okonjo, CEO, Fine and Country West Africa, who disclosed this to BusinessDay in an interview at the weekend, noted that the price increase was indifferent to the negative impact of COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 – 2021.

“The interesting thing is that we saw a dramatic demand for land all across Ikoyi, especially Banana Island, during the pandemic, starting from around April 2020 to the dizzying heights the prices have taken by mid-2022,” Okonjo said.

Besides infrastructure, which is top-notch on this Island, inflation and naira devaluation, which has given those with hard currencies buying advantage, have been fingered as the main drivers of the price increase. Okonjo added that buyer psychology and profile are also major drivers.

She noted that Banana Island was not an isolated case as other locations also saw price increases within the period under review. Within old Ikoyi and environs, she said, land prices went from between N380,000 per square metre and N450,000 per square metre to a post-COVID 2022 average pricing of approximately N800,000 per square metre—N950,000 per square metre for the higher density roads, representing over 100 percent increase.

Read also: Report sees further spike in rent, land values in 2022

“Lekki Phase 1 is not too far off in appreciation, because traditionally as ‘a not-so-distant cousin’ to Ikoyi as an upmarket location, it benefits from the growth across the bridge,” she said.

With average prices now at N350,000/sqm N400,000/sqm from pre-COVID prices in 2020 of about N200,000/sqm, buyers are definitely feeling the pressure here, especially as most mid-size developers scramble to acquire plots for new mini-size/cluster estates mid-size homes projects.

Another location where land price has gone up is Lekki Phase 1 which, according to Okonjo, is traditionally, a not-so-distant cousin’ to Ikoyi as an upmarket location as “it benefits from the growth across the bridge.”

“With average prices now at between N350,000 per square metre and N400,000 per square metre from pre-COVID prices of about N200,000 per square metre, buyers are definitely feeling the pressure here, especially as most mid-size developers scramble to acquire plots for new mini-size/cluster estates mid-size homes projects,” she pointed out.

Okonjo explained that investors were putting money in real estate for reasons that included the need to diversify from the dwindling stock market and to protect their local currency reserves as a hedge against high inflation rates by securing appreciating assets with limited supply.

Another reason, she added, was the increasing cost of creating new asset classes including investments in new businesses, or the difficulty in executing expansion plans along with the constraints and uncertainty around sourcing foreign exchange as an alternative hedge against devaluation.

“This means that most investors have begun exploring longer-term residential and commercial real estate developments, typically on a joint venture basis with experienced contractors/developers for the much bigger projects, by locking down these plots of land,” she noted.

Outside the island, land prices are also going up in other locations on the mainland, including far-flung locations like Ibeju-Lekki and Epe where price increases are driven by new developments in those areas.

In Ibeju Lekki, for instance, developers are acquiring land in response to developments such as Dangote Refinery, Lekki Deep Seaport, etc. This is to enable them provide residences for the projected populace to come.

A recent report by Estate Intel lists some of these projects that draw investors to these locations as the over 2,000-hectare Alaro City mixed-use project by Rendeavour located in the Lekki Free Trade Zone area, the over 305 acres Isimi Lagos project by LandWey Investments Limited.

The report shows that land prices in Epe are currently selling at an average of N10,156.34/sqm and are usually sold in various sizes ranging from 150sqm, 300sqm, 450sqm to 600sqm.

“The area has an average 5-year growth of 103.38 percent with prices being around N900/sqm in 2017. This jump is due to the recent infrastructure as well as rise in demand for the area, as there have been predictions of growth,” Deborah Jesusegun, senior researcher at Estate Intel, said.

SENIOR ANALYST - REAL ESTATE

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