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Monday, June 09, 2008

DG - Slowdown In Real Estate

Slowdown in the real estate market notwithstanding, land deals in India are thriving. According to a recent study, the total value of such deals, in the first three months of 2008, have touched around Rs 23,000 crore, while another Rs 10,000-crore worth deals are in the pipeline.

A study by top brokerage JP Morgan shows that Delhi-based developer BPTP's Rs 5,000- crore land deal in Noida was the largest deal in the January-March period, while the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority's land auctions in Bandra Kurla Complex had fetched around Rs 4,000 crore.

The deals in the pipeline include the Indian Railways' 50 acres worth Rs 10,000 crore that is scheduled to be auctioned later. Also, a Rs 115-crore deal between the Balaji group and Prestige group is likely to be completed soon.

In Mumbai, a Rs 250-crore deal by Hindustan Composites is in the final stage, in which developers such as DLF, Kalpataru and K Raheja Corp are the lead bidders. The JP Morgan report comes at a time when it is expected that a tightening in global liquidity and a slowdown in the economy, could put the brakes on the real estate sector which witnessed a sharp rising growth in the past two years.

As a reflection of this slowdown, developers' plans including malls, complexes and residential projects are all being kept under wraps. Property prices and rentals have been falling which was also seen in the loss of investor interest and an erosion in the market capitalization of large listed players such as DLF and Unitech. The slowdown is also aided by the fall in stock markets as there is now a lack of capital among investors to invest in real estate projects.

Industry officials said that given the limited avenues of fund raising, a number of developers raised funds through instruments such as primary equity offerings and through foreign currency convertible bonds.

All leading developers have also scaled up their development plans as well as made fresh land reserve acquisitions. "The fundamentals of Indian real estate are very strong. More and more global funds are entering India," said real estate consultancy Jones Lang LaSalle Meghraj chairman and country head Anuj Puri.

 

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1 comment:

Realty Rider said...

For all the talk about a slowdown in the economy, real estate prices in most parts of the country have not corrected as much as most prospective buyers would have liked them to. But, shares of most real estate companies are not finding any takers even after falling nearly 50% from their record highs in January this year. This would suggest that the ongoing sell-off in real estate stocks is a good opportunity for bargain hunting. Yet, most brokerage houses are advising their clients against doing so, as they foresee testing times for the sector in the near term. In fact, many of them are recommending that existing investors cut their losses right away as they could be in for a long wait for share prices to come anywhere near their lofty highs.T he sharp rise in real estate prices, coupled with high borrowing costs has let to softening of demand. The slump in the stock market, too, has contributed to the trend as many investors were earlier routing their gains in share trading into real estate.Industry experts feel that companies that have managed to buy land in Mumbai at reasonable rates could be good bets even in these turbulent times. With outlook on the market as a whole being bearish, brokers expect realty stocks to slip further.Most property developers in India were riding the wave of an unprecedented demand due to a combination of rising affluence, tax benefits for home owners and low interest rates. But, this fuelled speculative buying in the sector, causing property prices to soar to exorbitant levels.For more view- realtydigest.blogspot.com