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Residential Prices Slated to Decline in Delhi-NCR and Mumbai

by Paul Joseph April 14, 2011 Uncategorized

Weighed down by a piling up inventory as customers stay away, property prices in India’s key markets are slated to decline, while in other cities the trend is likely to be divergent . Apart from the fall in affordability of customers, due to a rise in property prices and interest rates, the other reason is developers’ fund requirement to complete the ongoing projects. “There would be correction in residential prices of up to 5 percent in NCR (National Capital Region), and Mumbai could see correction of up to 20 percent, while prices in southern cities of Chennai and Bangalore are expected to be steady…,” Pravin Malkani, president, Patel Realty India Ltd , told Reuters. Patel Realty is a unit of Patel Engineering . He sees the correction in Mumbai and Delhi setting in 4-12 months. “Prices in Hyderabad would depend on the political situation, while it is steady at the moment,” Malkani said. Crisil Research expects prices in Mumbai to fall 8-10 percent in 2011. “Prices of houses soared by 43 percent in 2010 in the city’s three major supply pockets. Prices thus surpassed their peak values, attained in the first half of 2008 by 26 percent, adversely affecting housing affordability,” said a Crisil Research report prepared in January. For residential projects, funding typically come from construction-linked installments which developers use for the project, said Shobit Agarwal, Managing Director of risk and business consulting and internal audit firm Protiviti Consulting. “…So when funding gets squeezed, projects tend to slow down due to capital prioritisation. Customers may delay purchases or hold back installments leading to slowing of demand which tends to soften prices for projects under development or construction,” Agarwal said, adding, he doesn’t expect noticeable correction in prices of completed projects. In February, realty sales registrations in Mumbai declined 22 percent on year to 4,716, while those of leasing went up 20 percent to 8,055, according to a March 17 note by research firm Prabhudas Lilladher. “Our interpretation of the sustained upward trend in lease registrations is that increased stress on affordability on account of increasing interest rates along with the expectation of a correction in property prices is leading to a deferral in purchases,” said Prabhudas Lilladher. India’s central bank has increased rates eight times in little over 12 months and has warned of inflationary pressures and emerging risks to growth. The Reserve Bank of India is widely expected to raise interest rates again by 25 baisis points on May 3 when it releases monetary policy statement for 2011/12. Most developers are in need of funds, mainly at project levels, and are in discussions with private equity (PE) firms, which are bullish on the long-term prospects of the sector. Kotak Realty Fund is planning to raise as much as $500 million by the second quarter of this year, while PE firm Milestone Capital Advisors is to invest $450 million this year in various sectors, including real estate. “Typically, the capital required, to my mind, is about 25,000-30,000 crore (250-300 billion rupees),” said Sunil Rohokale, Executive Director, ASK Investment Holdings Pvt Ltd, which manages 3.50 billion rupees through its real estate fund. He pegs yearly turnover of residential property industry around 1 trillion rupees.”This (PE interest) is also a positive indication in terms of pricing, in terms of execution, in terms of delivery and in terms of confidence in the minds of the consumer,” said Pradeep Jain, chairman, Parsvnath Developers Ltd , who has a contrarian view on property price movement. He believes prices would move northwards 5-10 percent in Delhi and NCR, while they would “little bit soften” in Mumbai. In tier-II and tier-III cities, the prices are seen rising. Godrej Properties Chairman Adi Godrej had also in an earlier interview indicated a price increase. “We have no plans to reduce the prices, in fact in most of our projects the prices are increasing…,” he had said. Jain attributed the price increase to a rise in input costs, including that of cement and steel, supply and cost of funds.

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Real Estate Prices in Mumbai Set to Decline

by Paul Joseph March 28, 2011 Uncategorized

Real Estate prices in Mumbai are set to decline further in overheated markets as sales have fallen due to unaffordable pricing, brokers and market analysts said. Developers, so far holding on to their prices, have started offering discounts to woo buyers to mobilise fund inflows through sales as money flow from other channels have dried up. Residential property prices in Mumbai, the most expensive market in India, have already seen a correction of 20 per cent from the peak level and it is expected to decline further in the range of 15 to 25 per cent, said analysts. A similar trend is expected in some pockets of supply-constrained Delhi market but too much correction is not expected in the NCR region, where prices are more or less stable and still affordable, analysts said. Making housing affordable * Developers offer discounts to mobilise fund inflows through sales * Money flow from other channels have dried up * In Mumbai prices have already dropped in Parel, Lower Parel, Mahalaxmi, Bandra East, Andheri East, Goreagon East, Mulund & Kurla * In Mumbai property prices picked up by 60% in 2010 * Sentiments of the mkt & rate of new project launches in Mumbai give an indication of likely oversupply by 2012 * Similar trend is expected in Delhi too, but too much correction is not expected * Realtors in NCR would start offering discounts as sales volumes have dropped “After surpassing the peak valuations of 2008 by 20 per cent in 2010, Mumbai’s residential property rates today are back on par with the 2008 benchmarks. This could be considered a correction due an increasingly urgent need for capital by the city’s developers,” said Sanjay Dutt, chief executive officer (CEO) (business), Jones Lang LaSalle India (JLLI). “It is fairly certain that this correction phase will continue for the next three months and inevitably extend into the traditionally slower monsoon-cum-vacation period,” Dutt added. Firms tracking the prices and unsold flat inventory levels said, the fall would continue for a longer period and prices would remain stagnant for a period because realtors jacked up prices in a hurry to make quick profits soon after revival of the sector post-economic slowdown. “For Mumbai, I am expecting a further correction of up to 35 per cent. There may be a case that you could see 25 per cent correction in the next two quarters and then prices would not appreciate for the next year or so,” said Pankaj Kapur, CEO, Liases Foras, a real estate research firm. The Delhi and NCR markets are completely different from Mumbai and analysts feel developers in the NCR would soon start offering discounts because sales volumes have dropped due to multiple effects. The discount may not be as high as Mumbai but some correction is inevitable due to the current economic scenario, analysts said. Areas in the range of Rs 3,000 to Rs 4,000 a sq ft would see a minimal correction while the expensive ones would require more price cuts. In Mumbai where the property market crashed in late 2008, pricing picked up by 60 per cent in 2010. “By the fourth quarter of 2010, residential property developers were building large land inventories, spending close to Rs 20,000 crore in Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore. Significantly, Rs 12,000 crore was spent in Mumbai alone. This resulted in extremely high land valuations, demanding higher average residential property sale prices based on the new appreciated capital values,” Dutt said. He said these land acquisitions were predominantly funded by non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) at 15 per cent plus interest rates in an already volatile real estate environment, where sales volumes had plummeted by close to 50 per cent. “Measures implemented by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to curb inflation further aggravated the pain as interest rates went up. Clear directions issued by financial institutions and the government led to a marked depletion of liquidity on the market and this put considerable pressure on the developers,” Dutt said on the rationale behind the offer of initial soft schemes to woo buyers. He said in Mumbai prices have already dropped in Parel, Lower Parel, Mahalaxmi, Bandra East, Andheri East, Goreagon East, Mulund and Kurla. The overall sentiments of the market and the consistent rate of new project launches in Mumbai projects give a very clear indication of an impending oversupply by 2012 and a lot of developers in the most severely affected locations are currently open to closing sales at lower rates, he added.

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Slowdown Hits Mumbai Residential Real Estate Market

by Paul Joseph March 25, 2011 Uncategorized

After a one-year period starting in the third quarter of 2009, which saw a strong recovery with a record 40%-plus increase in prices, the Mumbai residential real estate market has been seeing a slowdown over the past two quarters across various micro markets. The past six months have seen the return of negotiability in asking prices, and saw the return from a sellers’ to a buyers’ market . Both registration data and home loan disbursals are indicating a distinct slowdown. The number of apartments being sold in the first quarter of 2011 is considerably lower than in the corresponding period of 2010. Developers who were selling their entire projects in a few weeks are now taking months to sell their unsold stock. Many home buyers are playing the waiting game, anticipating a further correction. The key reasons behind this slowdown are higher prices, higher interest rates impacting affordability, lack of liquidity, scams diluting investor sentiment – and, to a lesser extent, excess supply in a few micro markets. Any slowdown in the economy has not been a key criterion. Many developers and agents admit that sales have slowed down. Gone are the days when large numbers of apartments were sold during the launch itself . The trend of short term speculators booking apartments at pre-launch or launch prices and selling them a few months later at higher prices (as witnessed in early 2010) has reduced considerably. Some of the other trends witnessed over the past six months include developers offering significantly lower rates to customers willing to cough up a 30-40 % down payment.

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Home Buyers Take Cover

by Paul Joseph March 18, 2011 Uncategorized

The near double digit inflation in the country is likely to make home-buying difficult. On the one hand, high inflation rate is putting pressure on builders to increase the prices of houses, while on the other hand it is forcing the government and the banking regulator to increase interest rates, making home loans costlier. But, a close analysis makes it clear that buying your first house for

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Unsold homes pile up

by Paul Joseph October 9, 2010

India Property New Delhi: The festive season is around the corner, but it could spell bleak times for India’s realty sector, as unsold inventory piles up. With the prices of residential units exorbitantly high especially in Delhi and Mumbai and a deluge of residential project launches quarter after quarter, it’s a clear demand-supply mismatch. The lean July-September quarter has been

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Airport in sight, Kalyan land prices take flight

by Paul Joseph August 20, 2010 Uncategorized

As of now, moving the proposed new international airport from Navi Mumbai to Kalyan is just a hypothesis. But real estate agents have moved in for the kill. Land prices in and around villages in Kalyan have picked up, sparking off a buying and selling frenzy that has left some euphoric and others deeply concerned. When the proposed site at Navi Mumbai ran into trouble over environmental clearances, a few experts pointed towards the 1670 acres of land already in possession of the Defence Ministry near Kalyan. As support for the Kalyan site intensifies, and planners seriously analyse feasibility of the project there, a guntha of land that used to be available for as little as Rs 10,000 barely a few months ago, is now being sold for Rs 4-5 lakh. So an acre of land, worth Rs 3 lakh, now costs Rs 1 crore. Plots adjoining any major road are priced twice that price. Amar Chavan, a broker who specialises in land deals around the proposed airport site admitted, “Locals refuse to sell at anything less than Rs 3 lakh per guntha, no matter who is buying and where the plot is located. Prices have gone up only in the last few months. With talks becoming concrete we expect the prices to go up ten times in the near future,” he said. Locals have mixed reactions to the real estate boom. “There are a number of plots that do not fall under the aerodrome land. Villagers in need of money are selling off parts of their land. Earlier the prices were very low. But now that an airport is being planned, prices have shot up tremendously,” said Sairaj Patil, a resident of Nevali village. Datta Fulore, a resident of Fulore village too confirmed that plots situated far away from the main roads that used to be sold for Rs 2-3 lakh per acre are being sold for anywhere between Rs 50-60 lakh. But those wishing to construct on these plots have to spend a bomb on converting these agricultural plots to non-agricultural land. Even developers scouting for land in these areas are having a tough time. Meghraj Dupange, a developer, who has constructed several projects in Titwala explained that prices have shot up so sharply that it is almost impossible for an individual to buy land for a farm or personal use. “I have been scanning the area, but the prices are far too prohibitive. However, I know the prices will go up further once the proposal is actively discussed. If the airport project gets clearance, a plot now being sold for Rs 5 lakh per guntha will go for Rs 15 lakh and above,” he said. Dupange explained that it makes sense to buy land now and construct as prices will only keep going up. “The fact remains that once the airport is cleared, big developers and five star hotel owners will want to buy land. Moreover, people will buy land to construct godowns,” he added. However, most buyers and sellers warn against cons who sell the same plot to multiple buyers. Moreover, plots already acquired for the airport are also being sold illegally. Meanwhile, the state government continues to put its might behind Navi Mumbai as the preferred location for the proposed international airport, over the other 16. A senior official told Mirror, “The Kalyan location may be hardsold by some elected representatives, but it has certain important negative aspects which cannot be easily ignored.” The bureaucrat explained, “The Kalyan site does not get the required three-degree gliding level for take-off due to the nearby hill. Also, the direction of the airstrip is north-south and not east-west, as needed.” Locals say no to airport Residents of all the 17 villages have intensified their movement to oppose the airport. They point out that their land was acquired by the government during World War II for a pittance. “The condition back then was that our land would be returned to us within six months of the war ending. But years later, though we are in possession of our land, the 7/12 extracts (proof of ownership of land) are still in the name of the government,” said Sairaj Patil, a local. Locals say the airport won’t help them. They have come together to oppose the airport. Earlier this week when some officials from the collector’s office went to survey the area, they were driven away. Source:http://www.mumbaimirror.com/article/2/2010081820100818020325700e9cdf1fa/Airport-in-sight-Kalyan-land-prices-take-flight.html Filed under: Mumbai , New projects Tagged: Kalyan , Real Estate in Mumbai

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Residential prices in NCR, Mumbai soar

by Paul Joseph August 3, 2010

What’s happening? Residential property prices in Mumbai and NCR are increasing sharply; average increases of 18-20 per cent over the past 12 months Ready possession properties in both cities are seeing as much as 40 per cent spikes in prices Price of housing in both cities is reaching a crisis point; unaffordable for the middle class Why are prices zooming? Large speculative demand in both cities; 65 per cent of NCR purchases speculative in nature Some relief over the economy revival; buyers pay premiums for ready possession, willing to take a risk on future projects as investments Builders in JVs with land owners are holding on to exorbitant prices, especially in Mumbai Apart from the daily traffic snares, noise pollution and common spaces chock-a-block with construction, there’s another truism for those living in India’s two megalopolises, NCR and Mumbai. The middle class can no longer afford to buy property in India’s capital and financial hub. Residential real estate prices in the two cities are reaching levels that several builders and real estate experts say are bordering on ‘sheer craziness’. This has even prompted a warning from the rbi governor during the recent credit policy: “In Mumbai and Delhi, real estate prices have overshot their pre-crisis peak…. we’re keeping a close eye on this.” It’s hard to understand this sharp increase. The rest of the country is seeing a fairly stable rise in prices and volumes. In contrast, experts say prices of residential units have gone up an average 18-20 per cent over the past 12 months in these two cities. In some cases, where residential projects are ready to be occupied, prices have shot up by almost 40 per cent. Interestingly, this upward trend doesn’t apply to commercial property: an oversupply there has kept rentals steady in both cities. “A 20-25 per cent rise in prices in residential property will strangle the demand from the genuine home-buyers.”Renu Sud Karnad, MD, HDFC “The price of homes in certain locations of Mumbai and Delhi are ridiculously high and something needs to be done to get the prices under control,” says Renu Sud Karnad, managing director of housing finance major HDFC. “A 20-25 per cent additional rise in prices in residential property might strangle the demand from genuine home-buyers. We have been telling developers that if there is an unprecedented rise in home prices, people will get out of the market,” she goes on to caution. Take the Shahs, for example. Shishir and Ruchi Shah currently live in a rented two-bedroom apartment in Goregaon West, Mumbai. This banker and teacher couple wanted to purchase a house in the same neighbourhood two years ago. They had looked at many new projects, but found most out of their budget. Then the slowdown happened. The Shahs reckoned that prices would fall and they would wait to see what happened. Two years later, they still can’t afford the ‘perfect’ apartment. Experts are unanimous that consumers would do well to wait and watch before making that purchase decision. “Open you eyes before you buy. Understand why you are paying as much as you are before making any decisions about purchases in these two markets,” warns K. Raheja Corp’s Vinod Rohira. Most realty experts agree—these prices are simply not sustainable. Sure, the Indian economy’s rapid recovery has buoyed this price increase. Also, while increments and bonuses are back, investment options haven’t kept pace. “As no major boom is foreseen in the stockmarket or gold, the only investment avenue seen as holding hidden gains is real estate,” says Rajesh Shukla, a statistician with ncaer. Builders also attribute the increase to higher input costs. “Inflationary pressures and high input costs coupled with the imposition of service tax has made real estate costlier for consumers,” says an official from Omaxe. Irrational Rise Prices of mid-segment residences continue to spiral upwards Buyers remain cautious about future projects but are confident of their investments in ready projects. In Mumbai, amenity-based projects that are near completion are finding takers even at higher rates. One such project in central Mumbai was priced at Rs 30,000/sq ft when it was launched three years back and fell to Rs 18,500/sq ft last year but is currently selling ready apartments for Rs 40,000/sq ft. “Whether the peaks in these two cities will stay is difficult to say. In real estate, cycles last five to eight years.”Anurag Mathur, Cushman & Wakefield In the NCR, however, it’s a more complicated story. There are several takers for both ready and future projects. Real estate analysts PropEquity says Noida has seen the most spectacular sales despite soaring prices. End-users drive part of it, of course, but many industry-watchers say speculative investment is hard at work here. “Broker-led consortiums are aggressively buying up apartments and reselling them at jacked up rates. This kind of speculative purchasing is artificially pushing rates up,” says one top developer. At the heart of the matter lies exorbitant land deals. Last year, builders could not afford to hold on to high prices given the kind of debt they had on their books. But joint ventures between developers and owners of land helped some stay above price cuts because they could afford to defer plans. During that debilitating period, the government allowed real estate companies to restructure their debt. “Also, if a developer has already sold part of a project at a high price, he will be reluctant to lower the price for the rest of it. Brand new projects will be sold at higher prices,” says Knight Frank’s Pranay Vakil. The rbi has since asked banks to be cautious about lending to real estate. “If all the proposed commitments on land and projected supply in Mumbai and Delhi come about in the next five years, it will mean a considerable amount of supply and it will put pressure on values,” predicts Sanjay Dutt, a consultant at Jones Lang LaSalle Meghraj. Another developer cautions that even the current spirals are going to be detrimental to future growth in both cities. “What is happening is stupid. There’s no justification for it, it will just mean higher costs of living. With interest rates rising and high inflation, it’s going to mean that people can no longer afford to stay on in these cities. It will have a ripple effect on industrial growth if things continue this way.” But the irony is that even though there is buyer resistance in both cities, demand still outstrips supply. And although volumes of sales in these cities are currently falling, it’s not affecting pricing because the drop in volumes is not significant enough. The current quarter may be a lean one for most developers due to the monsoons, a time when purchase decisions take a backseat. In other parts of the country, housing finance companies like HDFC expect that as long as properties remain affordable, demand will continue to be robust. The real test for NCR and Mumbai will begin when the festive and nri season starts. “Whether the peaks in these two cities will stay is difficult to say. In real estate, cycles generally last five to eight years. Trends do not support that prices will fall in the foreseeable future,” says Anurag Mathur, Cushman & Wakefield. Other experts agree that new projects would come at a higher price tag. Will builders continue with this madness or succumb to reasonable prices? Somebody has to press the stop button before it all inevitably comes down. Source:http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?266475 Filed under: Builders/ Developers , Delhi , Mumbai , New projects Tagged: NCR , Real Estate in Mumbai

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Mhada’s affordable home plan grounded

by Paul Joseph July 31, 2010

THE state-run Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority’s (Mhada’s) plan to provide 7,000 affordable homes in the space-starved city looks headed for a silent burial, as it has decided not to bid for the National Textile Commission’s (NTC’s) Bharat Textile Mill’s property as planned. It, in fact, wants to halt the property auction. Mhada earlier had offered to buy the 8.4-acre property at its base rate of 750 crore to construct houses for low-income category. But the technical bids for the property received by the NTC till July 28 did not have Mhada’s offer. Mhada chief executive officer Gautam Chatterjee said the agency was never in favour of open auction and had offered the minimum price reserved by NTC, even though that too was pretty high for the resourcestarved authority. “Mhada has also written to NTC and to the textile ministry seeking to abort the bidding process. We do agree that NTC is financially challenged, but there should be some social responsibility, especially for a city where getting space for common people has become difficult,” said Mr Chatterjee. The state housing agency has decided not to participate due to differences on valuations and requested the textile corporation to abort the bidding process even at this stage. NTC plans to take forward the bidding process next week. On the other hand, NTC chairman K Ramachandran Pillai said there was no room for backing off from the bidding process since they had already announced the auction and issued tenders. NTC has reserved a minimum price at 750 crore for about 8.4 acres of defunct Bharat Textile Mill at Worli. On its part, Mhada was planning to build about 7,000 affordable homes for the low, medium, and high income groups. The state housing agency was looking at developing some commercial property on a part of land and introduce cross-subsidy to keep the prices in affordable range of 4,000 to 6,000 per sq ft, Mr Chatterjee said. “Our concept was to apply a mechanism that could make the prices reasonable,” Mr Chatterjee added. If the land was given to Mhada, it would have been for the first time in the history of real estate that cross-subsidy would have been introduced. Under this mechanism, the subsidy given to a group of consumers, basically of lower income group, is recovered from the higher income group, something that is practised with regard to power tariff. However, NTC is reluctant to sell its land to Mhada at the base rate and has decided to go for open auctioning, hoping for a much better realisation. The central government-run NTC, which has been one of the major realty price-trend setters in Mumbai, expects higher valuations by selling land to private developers. In 2005, NTC had sold about 48 acres of mill land at various locations in central Mumbai for about 2,020 crore and expects to get at least at an average price of 100 crore per acre this year, according to NTC officials. More than half a dozen city developers, including Tata Realty, Lodha Group, Videocon Realty, Oberoi Constructions, IndiaBulls and DB Realty, are in the race for the Bharat Textile property. Meanwhile, bidding for NTC’s Poddar Process Mills, around the same location, started on Thursday and the highest bid for the day was 286 crore for a 2.4-acre land. According to industry analysts, developers could sell constructed properties at the price ranged between 25,000 to 50,000 per sq ft at that location. Source:http://content.magicbricks.com/ground-zero-mhada%e2%80%99s-affordable-home-plan-grounded Filed under: Builders/ Developers , Mumbai , New projects Tagged: Mhada , Mumbai , Residential Project

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‘Home prices at pre-slowdown peaks’

by Paul Joseph July 15, 2010

Mumbai Leading home-loans lender, HDFC, feels that residential real estate prices in the country are hitting the peak levels observed pre-slowdown. “There is an improved economic sentiment and developers have started charging premiums as land prices have also suddenly started going up…prices are getting to the peak levels,” HDFC’s Chairman, Deepak Parekh, said while addressing shareholders at the company’s annual general meeting here. Parekh said between September 2008–when the slowdown hit the markets–and October 2009, residential real estate prices dropped by over 25 per cent but have started going up afterwards. He cited such trends observed in India’s most active markets of NOIDA in the NCR, western suburbs of Mumbai and a Bangalore suburb to illustrate, saying the prices have gone up across all of them. Commercial real estate prices and rents will remain subdued for sometime, he said. “In the next 12-months, over 4-million square feet of office and IT space is going to be made available…where will there be takers for so much of space?” he asked. Parekh also said that he “strongly feels” for having a real estate regulator in place. Talking for the common man and the hardships faced, he said, “I feel the prices are very high and should go down.” Source : http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/–Home-prices-at-pre-slowdown-peaks–/646844/ Filed under: Mumbai Tagged: Real Estate in Mumbai

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Bangalore’s realty sector booming bigtime!

by Paul Joseph July 1, 2010

According to a report by the retail estate research firm, Cushman & Wakefield, Bangalore is the top real estate destination for commercial and industrial sectors. The real estate market in Bangalore is all set to boom once again! Real estate was the worst hit due to global economic recession, but now slowly things are getting back to normal. With India’s economic recovery well under way, the real estate market is also beginning to stabilize. According to a report by the retail estate research firm, Cushman & Wakefield, Bangalore is the top real estate destination for commercial and industrial sectors. It has become third preference for residential and hospitality sectors in India for real estate investment. The report reinforces the result by adding that Bangalore may witness the demand of 34 million sq. ft. for office space in the next three years. The realty sector is anticipated to grow at the rate of 30 percent annually over the next decade, which will attract foreign investment worth $30 billion, with a number of IT parks and residential townships being constructed across the city, real estate agents feel that this is the right time to invest as the prices aren’t too high. The report suggests a revival of demand in commercial real estate by corporates and multinationals. “Market is improving as of now because of these developments in the IT sector, so this is the right time to invest and to buy. Even the IT and ITes industries are considering expansion plans and evaluating opportunities available in Bangalore property market,” Said Anil Muthanna, a real estate agent. The population of Bangalore has increased by 35% in last seven years and is estimated to near 10 million in next two years. Due to the large scale migration and with more and more job seekers coming to Bangalore; this has opened avenues for many real estate developers to build residential and commercial properties across the city. “The biggest positive outcome of the slowdown is the sobering down of price levels. The market is tilting to becoming more buyer friendly. There was a point of time when you just couldn’t think of owning a luxurious two bedroom apartment in Bangalore but the prices have sobered down, but there is a good chance that prices will resurrect and hit the roof again,” Explains Anil. Properties priced between Rs 40 lakh and Rs 60 lakh are doing extremely well. And despite a 10% revision in price most of the builders are seeing good sales. In fact, all the property developers have commenced with their plans of expansion in Bangalore for growing residential and commercial needs. Prices had hit rock bottom last year due to slackening demand of property but according to sources it will not reduce any further now as these segments hold huge potential. Real estate builders are now developing projects for both high-end and upper middle class segments. The property market of Bangalore is expected to be vibrant by the end of this year by most of the real estate developers. Source : http://www.mybangalore.com/article/0610/bangalores-realty-sector-booming-bigtime.html Filed under: Bangalore , Builders/ Developers , New projects Tagged: Cushman & Wakefield , Real estate in bangalore

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