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North Coast property market - how an oil-price shock could hit sales
North Coast property market - how an oil-price shock could hit sales
Date: 2026-03-27
Leading South African Economist, John Loos's Household Sector Economy briefing argues 2026 looked set to be a stronger year for South African house prices (national growth forecast ~6% in 2026), thanks to mild repo-rate cuts and improving demand. But he flags the Middle East conflict and the risk of a sustained oil-price shock as a key downside risk. For the North Coast - a market reliant on tourism, second-home buyers and commuter links to larger metros - those global developments translate quickly into local sales impacts.
1) Travel and tourism demand: Loos notes transport and fuel are big drivers of CPI. A meaningful rise in Brent crude (he observed a move from under $60 to above $77/barrel in early 2026, recently peaked at $106.41 on 20th March 2026 and currently down to $97.41) raises domestic petrol and air-fuel costs. For the North Coast, this increases holiday travel costs, deters short-stay visitors and reduces seasonal rental occupancy. Slower tourist flows hit investor appetite for holiday homes and reduce buyer demand for lifestyle and holiday properties, pushing longer listing times and downward price pressure in that segment. At the higher end of the market, however, we find local travel replaces international travel at times when external shocks spike flight prices or make certain areas no-go zones. This could benefit holiday bookings in places like Zimbali that service the high-end holiday rental market.
2) GDP, employment and disposable income: Loos forecasts only modest GDP improvement (around 1.6% in 2026), and warns that oil-driven global weakness can lower demand for exports and curb domestic growth. For the North Coast, which benefits from hospitality, retail and construction earnings, a slowdown implies weaker employment and household income growth. Higher fuel-driven CPI eats into nominal disposable income, reducing the pool of buyers who can comfortably service mortgages or afford upgrades - especially impactful at entry and mid-price bands.
3) Local interest rates and mortgage finance: The report ties oil-price shocks to higher CPI and a likely change in SARB policy. Loos says mild rate cuts were expected but could be paused or reversed if inflation reaccelerates. For the North Coast market that is credit-sensitive, any premature end to rate cuts - or hikes - raises mortgage rates and monthly repayments, cooling demand. Although lending conditions and approvals were healthy early in 2026, an inflation shock could push pricing and approval standards tighter, reducing buyer power and transaction volumes.
4) Immediate market mechanics: Higher transport costs raise CPI and transaction costs (viewing properties, moving, maintenance) and can shift buyer preferences toward lower-maintenance, smaller properties closer to employment centers. Sectional Schemes with higher-than-average levies will lose out to those that have lower levies or to freehold homes without levies. Investor yields compress when holding costs increase and if rental demand softens, making some buy-to-let acquisitions uneconomic. When high levels of uncertainty prevail, do the transactions today at the prevailing prices rather than delay decisions to transact.
Practical implications for North Coast agents and sellers
* Price conservatively and highlight energy-efficient, low-transport-cost features.
* For investors, stress long-term occupancy strategies and diversify marketing off-season.
* Buyers should lock in competitive finance sooner if rate risk rises. Agents should help contracting parties make intelligent decisions based on the risks described.
* Sellers should be realistic on time-to-sale and take their agents' recommendations seriously.
Bottom line: a moderate, short-lived oil blip is manageable; a sustained surge (the 2008 experience remains a cautionary extreme) could quickly erode North Coast demand through higher travel costs, weaker incomes and less favourable mortgage conditions - turning a bullish 2026 local outlook into a more cautious marketplace.