The Borneo Post

Property slowdown hits Korean home lease system

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SEOUL: A lengthy property market slump and low interest rates are threatenin­g the future of a uniquely South Korean home lease system that traces its roots back to the 19th century.

“Jeonse” contracts have been a mainstay of the South’s housing market for decades, offering tenants the enticing, and at first sight startling prospect of not actually paying rent.

Instead, the tenant forks out a hefty, up-front deposit — typically around 40 per cent of the property’s value — which is then refunded in its entirety, or renewed, after two years.

At its peak in the mid-1990s, two-thirds of all housing rents and leases in South Korea were using the jeonse system.

The benefit for landlords was a large capital sum they could invest in high-yield opportunit­ies that were plentiful during the country’s rapid industrial­isation in the 1970s and 80s, when banks often offered double- digit interest

Essentiall­y, the jeonse deposit played the role of a bank loan, which the home buyers could pay back in the future when they amassed enough savings and were ready to actually move in. Kwon Joo-An, analyst at Seoul-based Korea Housing Institute

rates.

Those investment opportunit­ies included financing second or third properties purchased as a speculativ­e investment on the back of fastrising housing prices.

Landlords could return the deposit at the end of a contract and keep profits, or find a replacemen­t jeonse tenant who effectivel­y pays the deposit of the departing tenant when their contract begins.

The system was also a boon for first- time home buyers at a time when mortgages were hard to come by because of government policies that pushed banks to lend to manufactur­ing firms at the heart of the country’s export- driven growth model.

Typically, a property occupied by a jeonse tenant was traded at a price excluding the up-front deposit.

So buyers could get a home at the fraction of its cost, although they would eventually have to pay the departing tenant’s deposit before taking up residence themselves.

“Essentiall­y, the jeonse deposit played the role of a bank loan, which the home buyers could pay back in the future when they amassed enough savings and were ready to actually move in,” said Kwon Joo-An, analyst at Seoul-based Korea Housing Institute.

But some didn’t bother to move in.

Speculator­s would snap up several jeonse-leased houses at discount prices and then sell them at a huge profit, riding on and further fanning a real estate price surge.

In 1978, property prices soared 49 per cent across the country, 79 per cent in six main cities and a stunning 136 per cent in the capital Seoul alone.

“Back then, jeonse was also a popular way to increase personal wealth,” said Kwon.

“That’s what sustained the jeonse system for decades — the belief that property prices would just keep rising.”

Speculatio­n and property price inflation became a major challenge for policy makers, and successive administra­tions introduced measures to cool things down, but to limited effect.

In the end, it was brought to heel by changing market conditions brought about by a multitude of socio- economic factors — ranging from an ageing population to the global slowdown.

Since 2008, both interest rates and property prices have fallen — seriously underminin­g the twin foundation­s that sustained the jeonse system.

The low rates negatively impact a key benefit for the landlord —investing the jeonse capital sum at a high-level of return.

With investment opportunit­ies limited, landlords began switching from an underperfo­rming jeonse to a monthly rental system more familiar to the rest of the world. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on May 9 shows a general view of the Seoul city skyline at dusk. A lengthy property market slump and low interest rates are threatenin­g the future of a uniquely South Korean home lease system that traces its roots back to the 19th...
This file photo taken on May 9 shows a general view of the Seoul city skyline at dusk. A lengthy property market slump and low interest rates are threatenin­g the future of a uniquely South Korean home lease system that traces its roots back to the 19th...

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