By Mr. Jasmeet
Chhabra
When dealing
dispassionately with real estate as an investment, a few aspects need
deliberation.
The fundamental
premise of real estate investing has to be that you are in it for the long term
& that you are looking at an
effective hedge against inflation.
The fundamental
fallacy to avoid when looking at real estate investing is that you can trade it
at will & liquidate and hence it is alright to not provide for the entire
value of the purchase but just enough to hold and trade.
Real estate is a high
value commitment & unfortunately not
divisible into smaller units.
Before I embark on a
soliloquy on investing, I want to make it clear that nothing that I say below
applies to the home you live in or will live in.
A home to stay, a
roof above your head is not investment: it is emotional security for your
family. It may appear that prices have hit the roof & selling his sole home
and investing that money in a bank FD fixed deposit) will leave him with a surplus above the
rentals he may need to pay. On all such matters of grave repercussion, my
humble advice would be to hang on to your property.
When dealing
dispassionately with real estate as an investment, a few aspects need
deliberation.
Project Delivery
& delay..!
“This project will
never get delivered,” this is an often abused, rather callous statement we tend
to use to justify not buying an absolutely even priced good piece of real
estate. Remember that developers are as rational about money as we all should
be & often times more, and if it could not have been possible to build,
they possibly would not have imagined building it. Construction technology,
architectural prowess, workmanship, these all are globally interconnected and
commercially available talents and barring some delays, that 100 - storey tower
or that 100 - acre township will more often be a reality.
I imagine the next
concern would be delays.
“This project will
not be ready in the next ten years” is common. This needs addressing from
different aspects. First your developer / builder / promoter has no interest in
delaying delivery. He/she sells you the goods at a predetermined price today
and the longer it takes to deliver, the higher is the risk of cost escalation
while at the same time postponing milestone - linked cash flows and ultimately
profit gratification.
For a moment, let us
consider that the project still does get delayed. Well, by the virtue of
milestone - linked payments, your investment is proportionately postponed as
well. It is true that till the property is not ready, the money already
invested is stuck, but then when was the last time an under-construction property
did not get sold? Or it got sold at a steep discount to the market?
In my limited
experience, delay has never resulted in price discounts as much as developer’s
/ builder's reputation has been. Often time’s value diminution in
under-construction property is a function of a developer’s reputation or his
financial well-being. The issue in these cases is not so much of delays but the
ability to complete. This is an obvious risk & a potent one.
Developer’s / Builder' sTrack Record..!
Indeed, this risk
required maximum attention when making the buying decision and the basis of
such decision can not be casual living room chats & gossip or / even our perception of how we
think a developer’s / builder's financial &
moral health should be. This question’s answer is in research, track
records & past deliveries of the
developer, his goodwill among his contractors and other shareholders, personal
interaction with his organization and a cold and calculated analysis of tell
tale signs that present themselves about the project.
For instance, just
because a developer / or builder has multiple projects launched does not mean
he is stretched. Just because we think he may have bought land expensive does
not mean he will go belly up. Just because we think his product is overpriced
does not mean he will not find buyers.
Demand, Supply &
Affordability..!
Real estate like any
other business follows fundamental laws of demand, supply & affordability.
It is worthwhile to bear in mind that if it is being built, it is most
certainly being sold as well.
Practical matters
Payment plan:
The biggest virtue in
buying property is the staggered completion - linked payment plan. This is the
only effective lever one has to control one’s investment. This can not be
sacrificed for upfront cash discounts or / lures of discount to convert it into
a pure time linked payment mechanism. A little extra paid over time will
eventually be more satiating than the grief of delays if one has paid it all
upfront.
Snob value:
We often get carried
away by distant locations and cheaper product offerings in faraway lands. To my
mind, real estate has a value attached to land brick and mortar. And then, it
has a snob value. This snob value is the biggest multiplier in value accretion
and unfortunately it does not come in faraway lands.
It is quite simple.
If you will not go the distance, others like you will also possibly not. And
the lower you go in the affordability chain, the more inelastic the pricing
becomes because affordability plays a much larger role and is a lot more
limited as you go down the value chain. It does good to remember that cheap
real estate is an outcome of either poor demand or / poor affordability. Snob
value is primarily a function of the location or address as we call it.
But, a location that
has been developed into a destination, a project offering better amenities and
community living, these are other aspects that add to the aspirational value of
real estate, thereby enhancing its value in the medium to long run.
Infrastructure
issues:
Lastly, overloaded
infrastructure can not be construed as non-existent infrastructure. In a
thriving city, the city centre often has the poorest infrastructure and the
highest prices. A thriving business district or a prime residential location
with traffic snarls often tends to fetch a premium compared with locations on
the outskirts with ambient motorways.
I will end with a
quote by Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt: “Real estate can not be lost or stolen, nor
can it be carried away. Purchased with common sense, paid for in full, and
managed with reasonable care, it is about the safest investment in the world.”
About the author..!
Jasmeet Chhabra is an
independent real estate private equity professional.
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