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Is Real Estate Reviving? Depends On Who You Ask

Real estate index is the second worst performer so far this year.

Labourers work at a real estate construction site in Mumbai (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Labourers work at a real estate construction site in Mumbai (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Developers and property consultants are unanimous that India’s real-estate demand is recovering from the twin blows of the note ban and a new housing law. Citi Research says that’s unlikely soon.

There’s been no significant improvement in India’s residential market, Citi Research said in a report. Demand fell by 12 percent and 23 percent in the quarter and year ended March, respectively. Recovery will be prolonged and measured due to weak demand conditions combined with hardening interest rates, it said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi outlawed 86 percent of the currency in circulation in late 2016, hitting the real estate sector the hardest as buyers had to pay up to 40 percent in cash upfront. The Real Estate Regulation Act that followed protects customers against false promises and bars builders from shifting funds from one project to another. A combination of the two triggered a cash crunch, bringing down demand and new launches.

Sentiment improved in 2017 as the companies were upbeat on the government’s affordable housing push. The Nifty Realty Index surprised by turning out to be the best performer that year. Not only did the index more than double last year, it also clocked its best annual performance since inception in 2008.

But the index has had a rocky 2018, falling nearly 23 percent this year. That makes it the second-worst sector performer after the Nifty PSU Bank Index’s 25 percent decline.

Developers are upbeat though. In interviews with BloombergQuint in June, they'd said the current financial year would be better than the previous one. Here are key highlights from the interviews:

Godrej Properties Ltd.

  • Bullish on the residential space.
  • Expect profit to double in the next five years.
  • Expect return on equity to grow to 20 percent from 10–12 percent over the next five years.

Sobha Ltd.

  • Believe financial year 2019 will be better than financial year 2018.
  • Seeing good growth from the contract manufacturing business.

Prestige Estates Projects Ltd.

  • Expect Rs 4,000 crore of new sales value for financial year 2019.
  • Sustainable margin levels to be around 25 percent going forward.

DLF Ltd.

  • Believe financial year 2019 will be better than financial year 2018.
  • To focus on clearing existing inventory.

The real estate sector is ripe for a strong upturn as suggested by economic indicators –growth in India’s GDP, interest rates being low and affordability being at its best in the last 15 years, Pirojsha Adi Godrej, executive chairman at Godrej Properties, had told BloombergQuint in an interview. He is betting on the residential segment not only as developer but also as a home buyer.

Anarock Property Consultants Pvt. Ltd said in its latest report that housing sales and project launches in top seven cities rose by nine and 21 percent, respectively. It sees a similar trend in the commercial real estate segment and expects nearly 85 malls to come up in the next five years. There’s a rise in demand for Grade A office spaces across cities, it said. The new financial year has started on a positive note with April demand rising 25 percent and supply increasing 6 percent on an annual basis, said Anarock.

Is Real Estate Reviving? Depends On Who You Ask
Is Real Estate Reviving? Depends On Who You Ask

Citi Research paints a different picture. It said the demand for commercial real estate declined 20 percent in the quarter ended March and by nearly six percent in the year ended March 2018. A challenging situation persists for Grade B commercial space, it said.

Is Real Estate Reviving? Depends On Who You Ask