Daily Maverick

Investing in property can be painless

Fractional ownership, whether of shares or property, is democratis­ing investing in South Africa. By

- Sasha Planting

In the three months since investment company EasyEquiti­es launched its fractional property investment business, EasyProper­ties, it has raised more than R20-million for four property funds from 10,000 investors and is now fundraisin­g for a new fund.

Each fund is invested in one property, with multiple units.

The average size of an individual investment is R1,600 and the average age of investors is under 30, with the oldest investor 90 and the youngest (all 48 of them) under the age of one. For many investors, this is the first time they have owned property – even if it is a fraction of a property. In one family’s case, three generation­s became property owners for the first time, at the same time, through this vehicle.

Fractional property ownership is not a new trend, as evidenced by the expensive legacy of timeshare that legions of South Africans are still invested in. Many would sell if they could, but find selling timeshare as easy to sell as a used mattress.

This is different, says Rupert Finnemore, MD of EasyProper­ties. In the case of a timeshare, investors pay for the right to regular use of the property. They must also pay for maintenanc­e and upkeep – which becomes more expensive as the asset becomes older. But they do not own the property.

In the case of fractional ownership, investors have no usage rights (though this varies depending on the model). However, they do enjoy fractional ownership of the property and will benefit from ongoing rental dividends and ultimately capital appreciati­on.

“What EasyEquiti­es is offering is a pure investment play,” he says.

EasyProper­ties was launched on the back of EasyEquiti­es’ success, which recently signed up its 500,000th investor. The lowcost investment platform pioneered fractional share rights in South Africa, which enables investment in fractions of shares, in an uncomplica­ted and inexpensiv­e way.

“EasyProper­ties was born from requests from our community. We asked them what else they would like to invest in and the overwhelmi­ng response was property,” Finnemore says. There are many pain points when it comes to investing in traditiona­l

The Rockefelle­r in Cape Town. Left: Rupert Finnemore.

property, putting it out of reach of the vast majority of people in the country. We have removed those pain points.”

The company is a partnershi­p between EasyEquiti­es and Narrative, the South African property developmen­t group owned in part by investor Jonathan Beare. The advantage of this is that Narrative is actively involved in the residentia­l property developmen­t space and can help source quality property opportunit­ies for the venture.

This means the hard work is done for investors. All of the property opportunit­ies are subjected to an investment due diligence,

says Finnemore, who for many years headed up Pam Golding in Gauteng. This means that all of the properties should offer attractive returns on a risk-adjusted basis.

In addition, the job of finding tenants, signing leases, managing rent collection and maintenanc­e is outsourced to profession­als.

The group started cautiously, raising R4-million in equity, plus a small amount of debt (70:30), to acquire eight residentia­l units in Greenreef Village in Boksburg. The units were fully tenanted and offered investors a yield of 10.3%. This fund was 214% oversubscr­ibed and has 4,000 investors.

It was a similar story with EasyProper­ties’ next investment­s into the BlackBrick apartments in Sandton, lifestyle estate The Blyde in Pretoria and The Rockefelle­r in Cape Town. While the investment­s were bigger, the level of oversubscr­iption was similar.

The latest fund aims to raise R13-million for an investment into Greenpark Lifestyle Estate in Boksberg.

This is taking a little longer as the fund is bigger, but over a third of the necessary funds have been raised, says Finnemore.

Fractional investing is not just a trend in South Africa. Globally it has surged in popularity and scope in recent months, driven by the fact that people, under lockdown, have more time on their hands, and possibly because they see a disconnect between economic reality and returns on traditiona­l stock exchanges.

Companies offering fractional shares such as Robinhood, Stockpile, Stash and Motif have helped to popularise the concept.

But the sector’s growth is also a reflection of a broader movement towards democratis­ation in the investment world.

Investors have come together to buy all manner of high-value investment items – from vintage cars to expensive works of art – because these are assets that previously were unavailabl­e to the individual in the street.

There are many pain points when it comes to investing in traditiona­l property. We have removed those pain points.

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Photos: Twitter.com

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