Real Estate
Wealthy Investors Should Bet On Prime African Real Estate - Knight Frank

High net worth individuals seeking “risky” property investments with potential for huge returns should be focusing on key African markets such as Nairobi.
High net worth individuals seeking “risky” property investments
with potential for huge returns should be focusing on key African
markets such as Kenya’s capital Nairobi, according to an official
of London-based real estate firm Knight Frank.
Andrew Hay, head of global residential, told Bloomberg
TV in a recent interview that he would encourage HNWs
seeking high-risk and high-return property investments, to buy in
Nairobi.
“I think if you wanted to be risky, I would take you to Nairobi
in Kenya,” Hay explained, adding that he would take investors
looking for “quick growth” to Dubai in the UAE, while
conservative ones seeking “prolonged, well-performing investment”
would be taken to London or New York.
Similarly, Hay ranks Jakarta in Indonesia as another high risk
property market, with Jakarta and Nairobi having outranked global
cities in terms of house price growth over the past few years. In
its latest global rental index, Knight Frank said Nairobi topped
the annual rankings for the second consecutive quarter with a
25.8 per cent increase in high-end house rents in the 12 months
to end of September.
The increase in rents, it said, was due to expatriate demand for
secure high-end rental houses in Nairobi’s suburbs amid increased
terrorism threats.
“Recent security concerns (in Nairobi) mean demand for secure
accommodation – be it apartments or gated compounds – is strong
and supply is limited,” the firm’s international residential
researcher Kate Everett-Allen stated in the Prime Global Rental
Index for the third quarter 2013.
Expatriates tend to focus on rental houses in upmarket suburbs
such as Westlands, Kitisuru, Gigiri, Muthaiga, Runda, Roselyn and
Karen, where the high rents make Nairobi a hotspot for HNWs
seeking lucrative returns. However, the firm also warned that
investments here involve a huge risk due to the rising security
threats.
To this end, the index also revealed that prime rents rising in
Nairobi and Dubai have been an exception in post-crisis markets,
as other key cities worldwide recorded weak rental growth up
until 2012.