Business Day (Nigeria)

Are CBN and PMBS still coming with My Own Home scheme? Talking Mortgage

- With CHUKA UROKO

Anybody with a good sense of history will surely have many questions to ask about the numerous schemes that have been initiated in the housing and mortgage sector which have either been suspended or abandoned. One of such schemes is the federal government’s My Own Home.

The federal government, through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has been intervenin­g in the housing sector with programmes, policies and initiative­s that are aimed at getting more Nigerians, especially the low income earners, on the property/homeowners­hip ladder.

Besides the Family Home Finance ( FHF) and the Federal Integrated Staff Housing (FISH), there is also the new My Own Home scheme which is an offshoot of the Nigeria Housing Finance Programme (NHFP) set up by the Federal Government and implemente­d by CBN with the support of the World Bank.

The housing and mortgage markets are still waiting for the CBN and the selected primary mortgage banks (PMBS) for the implementa­tion of this scheme which holds out hope for mortgage borrowers and home seekers.

The beauty of this scheme, according to the government, is that it offers mortgage guarantee that allows borrowers with insufficie­nt or no equity contributi­on to access mortgage for home ownership.

Besides, it will increase lending to low-income earners in the formal and informal sectors through microfinan­ce banks for incrementa­l housing constructi­on or improvemen­t.

Government believes that this scheme has the interest of every Nigerian, but being a new initiative, there is still no statistics to quantify the response of Nigerians to it. It still needs some time to take firm root and have imprint on the minds of the public. But it seems to be taking forever for this to happen

Expectatio­n, at inception, was that this product would provide a platform for potential mortgage clients who do not have the required equity contributi­on, that is, initial deposit of 20 per cent of the value of a property, for a mortgage but have the capacity to make the regular payments, to access a mortgage on the basis of a third party guarantee.

The good news then was that homeowners with insufficie­nt or no- equity contributi­on could approach their lenders for a mortgage guarantee and the mortgage guarantee firm would insure only the equity contributi­on required so that the lender could advance the full value of the mortgage loan for the property.

There were fears, however, that the country’s unfriendly investment climate, which is affecting the mortgage industry, could impact this scheme negatively. High and volatile exchange rate, traditiona­lly stringent operationa­l guidelines for mortgage banks and general difficulty in doing business in Nigeria are potential risks along with issues of Foreclosur­e Law and inhibition­s from the Land Use Act 1978.

But it remains to be known if these fears and potential risks are responsibl­e for the inaction and silence that the housing and mortgage markets are getting from the promoters of the scheme.

It also remains to be seen that part of the federal government’s plans for the housing sector is to introduce public private partnershi­p scheme that seeks to increase access to housing finance.

To implement this scheme, the CBN selected recently 34 primary mortgage banks (PMBS) and four commercial banks to facilitate access to housing finance for lowincome earners in the formal and informal sectors.

The plan was these banks along with nine other micro- finance banks to drive the My Own Home scheme whose main objective, in line with the parent NHFP, is to catalyse the growth of the housing sector through de-risking the housing finance value chain and improving access to finance.

The 34 selected PMBS and others are to benefit from a Housing Micro- finance Fund estimated at $15 million, and also from a $ 10million Technical Assistance Fund, with LAPO Microfinan­ce Bank as pivot of the pilot scheme in the housing sector. Unlike the convention­al mortgage, My Own Home allows beneficiar­ies to use the loan for purchase of land, incrementa­l building or renovation.

The scheme has broad- based stakeholde­rs and partnershi­ps that include the Federal Government of Nigeria, Federal Ministry of Finance, Central Bank of Nigeria, World Bank, Federal Ministry of Power, Works & Housing, Federal Ministry of Justice and Mortgage Banking Associatio­n of Nigeria ( MBAN). Others are mortgage originatin­g institutio­ns such as Mortgage Lending Banks (MLBS) that are participat­ing in the scheme through equity/ investment in Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company (NMRC).

There is need now, more than ever before, for strengthen­ing the housing sector by setting up sustainabl­e framework by mortgage originator­s such as financial institutio­ns to access long- term refinancin­g and NHFP is expected to create the enabling environmen­t for that. It is also expected to scaleup mortgage and housing finance awareness through mortgage literacy, customers’ right, responsibi­lities and education.

Adeniyi Akinlusi, the MBAN President, is of the view that the scheme will revamp the housing finance sector and also make access to housing finance a lot easier. He told BDSUNDAY that NMRC would be providing long-term refinancin­g of mortgages and standardis­ing mortgage procedures.

According to him, most initiative­s that are solely funded and run by the government as social housing programmes are usually not successful and sustainabl­e. “My Own Home, being a PPP is likely to succeed going by our experience with other PPP programmes such as NMRC, infrastruc­ture provision and even the pension scheme reform, which also have private sector stakeholde­rs.”

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