Showing posts with label rgvillas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rgvillas. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

NCR India's most speculative property market

The Indian realty space is in the spotlight again. The commercial and residential market in Mumbai has been very subdued. Several developers and experts feel the recovery of the Mumbai property market is still a little distant.Prime Property takes a look at the National Capital Region (NCR).

The NCR is often called India's most speculative market. It is a large market covering New Delhi's suburbs Gurgaon and Faridabad in Haryana, as well as Noida, Greater Noida and Ghaziabad in Uttar Pradesh.

Analysts often say that nearly 50 percent of the investments in the NCR is driven by investors. Knight Frank points out a sluggish demand and fewer project launches in the NCR.

Nearly 35,000 residential units were launched from October 2012 to March end of 2013. That's a dip of 31 percent year-on-year. So in light of weaker demand, it does seem as if developers have kept a check on new launches.

The liquidity crunch being faced by real estate companies is yet another reason. Developers continue to cope with the pressure of finishing delayed projects, thus very much on the prowl for funds to finish construction. Knight Frank says Noida in UP has witnessed a steep dip in launches in the second half of FY12.

It pegs 135,000 residential units have been announced in Noida, of which nearly 20 percent or 27,000 apartments are unsold. Knight Frank says Noida's loss has been neighbouring Greater Noida's gain. Greater Noida envisaged as a self sufficient city mushrooming along the Yamuna Expressway and today viewed as a more affordable market. Here is the Knight Frank outlook and prevailing price per square foot.

Mudassir Zaidi, regional director-North, Knight Frank India says, “ In Noida we have weighted average price of about Rs 5,200 and in Greater Noida we have an average with the price of about Rs 3,100. There is a significant difference in terms of the kind of end users or investors that they cater to. Greater Noida is roughly available at 50 percent of what Noida is available at. ”

Now the worrying part is that the NCR residential market has an estimated 140,000 unsold units, out of which 66 percent are concentrated in Noida and Greater Noida. Also there have hardly been any launches off late in the Rs 25 lakh to Rs 50 lakh bracket, which is what had primarily attracted buyers to Noida in the first place.

Gurgaon or the Millenium City is perhaps NCR's best performing micro market. Here you have more expensive properties when compared to Noida and Greater Noida. There's massive development around the proposed 25 kilometre-long Dwarka Expressway near the border of Delhi and Gurgaon.

Despite the expressway's construction being stalled, there was significant buyer interest. This part of Gurgaon is now referred to as new Gurgaon. It has attracted all the big builders, from Indiabullsto Mahindra Lifespace to Tata Housing to Sobha developers.

According to Knight Frank 120,000 units have been launched in recent times in Gurgaon and New Gurgaon, out of which 19 percent or 23,000 apartments are unsold. Now even though the percentage of unsold inventory in Gurgaon is the same as Noida,  Gurgaon scores higher in sales velocity. On an average 5,000 residential units are sold in a quarter in Gurgaon, and that's double of what is sold in Noida.

Mudassir Zaidi, regional director-North, Knight Frank India: In terms of price appreciation Gurgaon is a market which has seen very good appreciation. In terms of yearly numbers we have seen around 30 percent rise in terms of numbers in Gurgaon area.

In terms of new Gurgaon area there has been about 50 percent on an average in terms of price rise. On an average last year there have been projects getting launched between Rs 4500-5000. The numbers right now are about between Rs 6,000-6,500 or so.

That has been most exciting in terms of price increase. Faridabad, also in Haryana, is a much smaller market with about 25,000 units available. But there are expectations of more launches once it is connected with Delhi and Gurgaon via the metro.

Mudassir Zaidi, regional director-North, Knight Frank India says, “Faridabad has an weighted average price of about Rs 3,300. I would expect that in times to come and the interest in the market increases, we see a number of developers look at launching projects in that region. I would expect the weighted average price to start inching up significantly. The kind of projects that have been offered right now are the high end. We are largely seeing middle income projects that are being launched out there.”

Ghaziabad, another small suburb is seen as a cheaper alternative to Noida. Knight Frank pegs total units on sale at 74,000 but it does have a high unsold inventory at 32 percent. The average price here is around Rs 3,100 per sq foot. So which is a better bet, Faridabad, or Ghaziabad?!

Mudassir Zaidi, regional director-North, Knight Frank India says, “I expect appreciation to be in the range of about 10 to 15 percent. It won’t be as much as what it is available in Gurgaon but it will be decent. So between 10 to 15 percent what I expect the appreciation to be about 10-12. I would think that in the times to come Faridabad should re-pick up well compared to Ghaziabad? ”     
Earlier this month, Jaypee did a site visit in Noida with analysts and investors, including those from influential brokerage firms like CLSA. Jaypee Group's executive chairman Manoj Gaur was also present.

Jaypee Group's most ambitious project has been the construction of the 165 km long six lane Yamuna expressway connecting Noida with Agra. Besides nearly getting nearly 4,000 acres from the Uttar Pradesh government for building that expressway, the company also got around 6,000 acres divided in five land parcels, all for real estate development.

All of this was hived off and listed as Jaypee Infratech in 2010. So far Jaypee had launched one of these parcels, the one in Noida, which goes by the name of Jaypee Wish Town. Jaypee had got a lot of flak from buyers for being late by up to four years with projects here.

This January, Jaypee Infratech had called off its offer for sale on account of poor market conditions. No doubt the analyst meet is a pre-cursor to Jaypee Infratech's fund raising plans, which the company will have to undertake before June which is Sebi’s deadline of meeting that minimum 25 percent public float norm. Manoj Gaur had told Prime Property last month that Jaypee Infratech would cut its Rs 6,800 crore debt by Rs 2,000 crore quite soon.

How that would be achieved was unveiled at the analyst meet. The company will pare its debt be selling nearly 400 acres of land to mid-sized developers and HNIs. Besides that, there have also been two recent launches.

Launchpad

Few minutes from its Gautam Buddh F1 Grand Prix Circuit, Jaypee has launched Sunnyvale Homes, a project comprising of residential plots. These plots will be part of Jaypee Greens, Sportcity township, and the base price has been fixed at Rs 27,200 a square yard. There are five plot sizes available, with base price ranging from Rs 41.61 lakh to Rs 65 lakh. 
Possession is 18 months after the provisional allotment letter is issued.

Analysts feel the price tilts on the more expensive side, but the premium is for accessibility via the expressway and also for being so closely linked with the F1. Jaypee though says it has got a great response and may even hike prices.

The company had also recently launched studio apartments at the Sportscity. Jaypee says the first phase of this project, Buddh Circuit Studios, was made up of 1600 apartments and sold out within four days. The base price was Rs 3,290 per sq foot. 

Jaypee is now gearing up for Phase II. The base price of that has been increased by Rs 100 to Rs 3,390 a square foot. So if the specifications remain the same, the studio apartments will cost just shy of Rs 19 lakh and Rs 25 lakh

Analysts are divided on what they make of the project. The price is attractive, it’s again very accessible via the expressway and its sales pitch includes the connection with the F1. But the studio apartments are obviously small. So are buyers the actual end users that will work in the vicinity. Or are the buyers who are investing hoping to lease out these apartments to those very professionals.

Bangalore realty market more positive for 2013

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Bangalore North - RG VILLAS


Heading north
Says Sam Chopra, Director – RE/MAX India, “Presently, real estate in North Bangalore is undergoing rapid transformation due to commercialization. Also, it is noticeable that the region has significant residential real estate activity, along with commercial developments.  The demand is growing with corresponding low supply in the pipeline. Other significant factors are the proximity to the airport, road projects and upcoming Business Park in Devanahalli.”
North Bangalore is ruling the realty charts in a sense. “In the recent past we have seen a huge influx of residential supply and demand in the north of Bangalore.
Areas such as Sanjay Nagar, Sahakar Nagar, Hebbal, Jakkur and as far as Yelahanka New town have been areas in high demand.
Yelahanka – Doddaballapur road is witnessing a huge demand for landed properties such as villas and private gated colonies. While the North develops in a more efficient and organised fashion, Sarjapur Road and Bannerghatta Road still has its loyal customers. But with the market opening up in the North, developers and investors alike are skeptical of new developments in the east and south east of Bangalore,” says Ravindra Pai, MD, Century Real Estate.
North Bangalore is most likely to see the highest level of appreciation which may given go up to 20-30% in some properties. The real estate boom from Devanahalli near Bangalore is also creating a lot of spillover in places like Anantapur,  Madakasira, Hindupuram, Chilamathur, Lepakshi, Parigi, Gorantla, Obuladevara Cheruvu of Anantapur dist which are as far as 65 km to 120 km away from Bangalore.

Ravi Benjamin Indian Real Estate Update: North Bangalore real estate thrives on IT sector g...

Ravi Benjamin Indian Real Estate Update: North Bangalore real estate thrives on IT sector g...: North Bangalore real estate thrives on IT sector growth Article The growth in North Bangalore thrives on IT development as a lar...

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Bangalore-Hottest Real Estate Destination across the Country

Domestic buying sees a rise in real estate market


Bangalore's real estate market, which once saw non-resident Indians (NRIs) lapping up almost 40 per cent of the total apartment units sold, has seen a change now, according to industry insiders.
With the increasing number of domestic buyers investing in the realty sector now, the NRIs share in total sales of apartment units has dropped to about 20 per cent in the recent times.
Bangalore's market has been attracting investments from the expat Indian population, mostly Kannadigas, residing in the U.S., West Asia, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand.
Approximately 30,000 apartment units are sold in Bangalore annually now. In fact, 2007 recorded the highest number of units ever sold annually at 40,000 units.
“The percentage of local buyers investing in apartment units has gone up from 60 per cent to almost 80 per cent now with increasing disposable income with families as well as accessibility to housing loan,” Shankar Sastri, Secretary of Confederation of Real Estate Developers' Associations of India (CREDAI), Bangalore, told The Hindu.
Bangalore as a real estate market, he said, always interested the NRIs so much so that many developers had representative offices in the U.S., West Asia and Singapore even two decades ago.
Besides, the realty market here had done well in the last two years due to stability, pricing, safety, said R. Nagaraj Reddy, president-elect of CREDAI, Bangalore.
He added that Bangalore has always remained a “preferred city” among those wishing to invest in housing sector.
This trend of change in the profile of apartment buyers is being seen in housing applications too, says State Bank of India Chief General Manager (Bangalore circle) Ashwini Mehra.
“There are more number of applications from domestic buyers now though there is a continued interest from NRIs residing in the U.S. and West Asia. Nearly 20 per cent of the total housing loan disbursement has gone to NRIs,” he said and added that nearly 80 per cent of the applications in the NRI category came from those residing in the U.S. and West Asia.
T. Venkatesh Babu, a strategist with a leading Bangalore-based real estate company, said that the number of NRI buyers may have come down, as those regions are facing economic uncertainty.
“People tend to conserve cash in such situations and may not like to make high value housing investment,” he said. Also, the speculative buying in Bangalore-market has come down significantly after the 2008-2009 crash, he said.
Interestingly, a large number of domestic purchasers of apartments in Bangalore are from Delhi, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and partly from Hyderabad and Chennai. “Most housing loan applicants are young service sector professionals, including those in IT and ITES, who may have come to work here,” Mr. Mehra said.
He also acknowledged that Bangalore real estate sector may have benefited from the Telangana crisis with some spill-over coming here, though a major share has gone to Visakhapatnam.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Indian Realty 2012

The picture for Indian realty continues to be rather uncertain at this time. While underlying demand drivers are intact, there is a tepid mood to invest as a result of uncertain worldwide growth. Interest rates also seem to be going the other way, namely up, whilst the rest of the World wallows in low interest rates, India continues to raise rates in the effort to curb any sort of inflationary pressures that plague it's consuming populations.

Transparency in the sector also continues to erode the customer experience and add to the risk factor for the consumer. An overhaul of the realty sector needs to take place from the top down to open up trade and improve sectoral performance. The Realty sector has the potential to add 1-2 points to the GDP and shift India into 4th gear. If it intends to lift it's citizenry out of poverty steps need to be taken to hit over 10% growth, as evidenced in the Chinese model to date.

As previously stated, the underlaying factors of population growth coupled with rapid urbanization rates, lend favorably to the continued stability of the Sector. I think the next up cycle will take place around 2015 onwards. Let's see how it all plays out. 

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Royal Indian Raj On the Move


Low rates stoke housing bubble

Peter Foster, National Post · Jun. 4, 2011 | Last Updated: Jun. 4, 2011 4:14 AM ET
Should Canadians be more concerned with inflated real estate prices or inflated real estate brokerage fees? This question springs to mind because of two aspects of Ottawa's current involvement with Canadian housing. On the one hand, the Competition Bureau is claiming to stand on guard for Canadians by breaking the real estate brokerage cartel and its 5% commissions. On the other, despite some marginal tightening of mortgage rules over the past 18 months, and repeated stern warnings from Mark Carney and Jim Flaherty not to use your home as an ATM, their artificially low interest rate policy is still promoting overheating.
According to a report in Friday's Post, the Office of the Superintendant of Financial Institutions is looking into the impact of foreign investment on Canadian real estate -which has reportedly been a factor in Vancouver, and recently featured a $28-million condo purchase in Toronto. However, any foreign investment impact is dwarfed by the influence of government policy.
Messrs. Flaherty and Carney claim that they have no choice but to hold rates down as long as the United States is still attempting -unsuccessfully -to flood the market with money. Otherwise the loonie might be goosed to uncompetitive levels. However, the irony is that U.S. interest rates are being held down to counter the consequences of a Washington-stoked, Wall Street-facilitated housing bubble. Unfortunately, but perhaps inevitably, this seems to be reflating everything but U.S. house prices.
Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets, was quoted in the Post this week as suggesting that: "Ironically, the misery of homeowners in the United States is actually benefiting homeowners in Canada." We should be wary of such "benefits." While the Canadian market never saw the insanities of U.S. subprime mortgages, and does not suffer from the continuing shadow of overbuilding and foreclosures, the desire of U.S. policymakers to compensate for their real estate mess may indirectly be stoking a mess -albeit of less epic proportions -here.
There is an almost startling difference between the state of housing markets north and south of the 49th parallel. The latest Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller housing survey showed that U.S. home prices fell 4.2% in the first quarter, extending the fall in house prices to eight months. By contrast, the latest Canadian figures suggest that while the volume of sales was down in the early months of this year, average prices in April were 8% up on last year. The average price of a house in Canada in April was $372,544, more than $100,000 above the U.S. figure.
For the moment, therefore, those thinking of buying or selling should perhaps be more concerned about the future of price levels than commission rates, although the latter are certainly also an issue.
Last week, the Competition Bureau launched a suit against the Toronto Real Estate Board at the Competition Tribunal for trying to squash competitive innovation. It claimed that TREB was preventing the flow of information from its Multiple Listing Service, MLS, to potential buyers via so-called "virtual office websites," VOWs, which would enable buyers to cruise relevant market details on the Internet.
This action follows a fight last year by the bureau with the Canadian Real Estate Association forcing CREA to allow its members (real estate boards such as TREB) to post flat-fee listings on the MLS for sellers who do not want the full hand-holding service package.
The Competition Bureau case against TREB raises the issue of why a buyer would need intense hand-holding, either, when relevant material could easily be made available online. Certainly, both real estate information and brokerage services are valuable. The problem is that they are overpriced. The evidence lies in the surplus of agents.
Bill Johnston, the president of TREB, reacted with outrage to the Competition Bureau's further assault on his members' ethics and livelihoods. He lashed out at bureau head Melanie Aitken for alleged "curveballs," "low blows," "career building" and "bad faith." He claimed that TREB was well on the way to rolling out its VOW strategy. Ms. Aitken, by contrast, suggested that TREB was dragging its feet.
One can understand TREB's reluctance to get with the innovation program. Although VOWs would be operated by TREB members, once you let prospective buyers start letting their fingers do the walking, everybody might start asking more questions about why those commission rates are still so high. Still, sending a complaint to the Competition Tribunal hardly guarantees a speedy resolution of the issue, which could drag on for years.
Consumer protection is usually misguided or ineffective. Adam Smith pointed out that tradesmen might be inclined to conspire, but solving this problem was best left to competition. Real estate brokerage is unusual in that it seems to be a successful long-term "conspiracy." CREA and its real estate boards have a tight grip on market information, which they obtain from sellers and hoard for their own benefit.
However, we can rarely rely on government to "protect" us. It is worth remembering that the Competition Bureau announced a "victory" over the real estate industry in 1988. Meanwhile, any good that this piece of consumer protection may achieve could be swamped by the impact of government policy elsewhere. While the Competition Bureau purports to protect the Canadian consumer, other parts of the Ottawa octopus, by encouraging home purcPublish Posthase via statebacked mortgage insurance and artificially low interest rates, are a much bigger threat to her welfare.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Manoj Benjamin endorsed as one of "Top 100 Most Influential People of 2007"

Vancouver tycoon to build Asian city

Government clears 25 FDI proposals worth Rs 201.58 cr Royal Indian Raj

Former World Chairman and CEO of HSBC Group, Lord Michael Sandberg, CBE Appointed as Chairman of the Advisory Board for the Royal Indian Raj International Corporation