Business Day (Nigeria)

Reasons there’s no more equity demand on housing loans below N5m

- CHUKA UROKO

For too long, the demand for equity contributi­on as a pre-requisite for accessing housing loan facility from mortgage and other deposit banks has denied many Nigerians opportunit­y to own homes, leading to the widening housing demand-supply gap in the country.

But that narrative is changing significan­tly by reason of one of the recent initiative­s by the Federal Mortgage bank of nigeria( fmbn ), which has scrapped equity contributi­on on housing loans bel own 5 million and 10 percent flat rate for housing loans beginning from N5 million to N15 million.

Zero equity on housing loans targeted at federal civil servants means those of them earning low salaries and are subscriber­s to the National housing fund(nhf)c an now access N5 million mortgage with which they can start the journey to home ownership without the usual fear and difficulty in repaying the principal and the interest.

“We have removed equity contributi­on on all loans below

N5 million in order to ease access to the National Housing Funds (NHF) in the country,” Ahmed Dangiwa, FMBN’S managing director, explained at an internatio­nal housing conference in Abuja recently.

Equity contributi­on is a financial contributi­on calculated as a percentage of the loan, usually as high as 30 percent, which mortgage lenders demand from borrowers to serve as a hedge against loan default and also as a means of reducing the borrower’s risk exposure.

Mortgage banking operators say equity contributi­on is fundamenta­l to mortgage lending just as regular flow of income is. “Equity contributi­on is fundamenta­l because there are institutio­nal and regulatory developmen­ts that are still being expected in the industry.

“There is no depend able database of Nigerians yet; the national ID card remains largely unreliable and foreclosur­e laws are still not strong,” Eniola Bamidele, a mortgage operator, explained to Businessda­y. This has been a major impediment to owning homes in Nigeria where house prices are extremely high. It is the reason homeowners­hip level in the country is a little above 10 percent as against Singapore’s 65 percent, UK’S 72 percent and over 80 percent in the US.

Equity contributi­on also validates a report compiled by Pison Housing company which says that about 80 percent of the Nigerian population lives in rented accommodat­ion, spending 50 percent of their income on paying house rent.

The Lagos State Home Ownership Mortgage Scheme (LAGOSHOMS) was an innovative and pace-setting initiative with which the state government under the Babatunde Fashola administra­tion wanted to increase homeowners­hip level in the state through increased access to mortgage.

The laudable scheme could not go far because of the 30 percent equity contributi­on, which the scheme demanded from the subscriber­s. The downward review of the equity contributi­on to as‘ low’ as 5 percent did not strike a loud chord among the state’s civil servants, which the scheme was targeted at.

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