Review 2014..!
2nd Best Year Ever For
Absorption, Lowest Vacancy In 5 Years
By Mr. Ramesh Nair, JLL India
Given the policy paralysis witnessed during the last two financial
year (FY 2012-13 and FY 2013-14), GDP growth was recorded below 5% year on year
during both years.
Overcapacity in the critical mining and manufacturing sectors
reduced the crucial supplies needed by various industries.
As a result, a deadly combination of high inflation and falling
consumption eventually stunted growth until early 2014. However, since the last
two quarters, things have turned around.
Mr. Ramesh Nair, JLL India |
With the renewed confidence, the Indian economy is operating at a
speed where current year (Fy2014-15) growth is expected at not below 5.5% y/y.
Simultaneously, inflation has ceased to pose challenges to growth, which is
positive.
All this led to the Indian office market having the 2nd
best year ever (other than 2011) in terms of absorption and the lowest vacancy
levels since late 2009.
Demand..!
Close to 3 crore square feet of office space got
absorbed in 2014, a 30 lakh jump in net absorption compared to the previous
year. Cities which contributed the highest in terms of absorption were
Bangalore and NCR-Delhi.
|
Delhi
|
Mumbai
|
Bangalore
|
Chennai
|
Pune
|
Hyderabad
|
Kolkata
|
||||||||
Net absorption
(mn sq ft)
|
5.38
|
5.46
|
9.39
|
2.12
|
4.21
|
2.59
|
0.70
|
||||||||
Contribution in India
absorption (%) 2014
|
18%
|
18%
|
31%
|
7%
|
14%
|
9%
|
2%
|
Bangalore witnessed a significant 72%
year-on-year increase in net absorption in 2014, followed by NCR-Delhi (48%),
Hyderabad (41%) and Pune (13%). Kolkata (-55%), Chennai (-43%) and Mumbai
(-21%) witnessed a fall in net absorption from levels seen last year. A reason
for the drop in absorption in Mumbai and Chennai was the lack of availability
of suitable office space in the preferred micro-markets.
The considerable growth of the IT-ITeS and
e-commerce sectors is clearly visible in the growth of office space demand in
the IT cities, whereas expansion was limited in sectors such as BFSI (which
would have benefited Mumbai significantly). Mumbai also witnessed limited
supply in comparison to other tier 1 cities such as Bangalore and NCR-Delhi.
In NCR, Gurgaon, NH8, MG Road and Noida
city witnessed higher absorption in 2014 than in 2013. In Mumbai, the Eastern
Suburbs and Thane-Navi Mumbai are the two sub-markets that witnessed higher
absorption in 2014.
In Bangalore, SBD and Whitefield witnessed
higher absorption, while Chennai was among the few cities whose CBD recorded
marginally higher absorption compared to 2013. Chennai’s PBD (peripheral
business district) saw the biggest jump in take-up, while all other sub-markets
it was relatively lower.
Pune is among the two cities (besides
Kolkata) where CBD, along with SBD, witnessed a respectable jump in absorption
compared to that of 2013. The city’s suburbs witnessed a lower absorption from
last year.
Hyderabad saw Hi-tech City and Gachibowli
recording a higher absorption than last year. Absorption in other sub-markets
was relatively lower, particularly in the CBD. Kolkata saw CBD absorption
growing by more than 4x during 2014 when compared to 2013.
Sectors that contributed the highest in
terms of leasing were IT-ITeS (35%), BFSI (17%), Manufacturing (13%), and
Consulting business (6%).
The improved economic outlook in the US,
strengthening domestic capital markets and the government’s bold efforts to
boost manufacturing sectors among the reasons why these sectors outperformed
the others in terms of leasing.
US companies (44%) continued to retain the
dominant in share of office space leasing in India in 2014, although its share
has decreased by 4% points from the previous year. Domestic companies have
increased their share to 33% from 31% the previous year. Despite economic
concerns in European Union, the region increased its contribution to leasing by
2% in 2014 to 16%.
Supply..!
Total stock of Grade A
office space across major Indian cities grew by 8.0% in 2014 over the previous
year, with an additional supply of slightly below 30 million sq ft. Bangalore
saw the biggest addition in office supply in absolute area terms, followed by
NCR-Delhi.
Mumbai, Pune and Hyderabad witnessed only
moderate increases in supply. Chennai and Kolkata added very little supply to
the overall basket during the year.
Vacancy..!
Pan-India office space vacancy dropped
from 18.5% as of end-2013 to 16.9% as of end-2014. Mumbai, Chennai and Pune
were responsible for this steep fall in vacancy during the year.
While limited supply was helpful in
reducing vacancy in Mumbai and Chennai, Pune benefited from both moderate
supply and healthy growth in absorption. Despite a significant rise in supply
in Bangalore, a healthier absorption resulted in reduced vacancy. The current
vacancy levels in Mumbai is the lowest seen over the last 36 months.
|
Delhi
|
Mumbai
|
Bangalore
|
Chennai
|
Pune
|
Hyderabad
|
Kolkata
|
||||||||
Vacancy (%)
|
27.8%
|
20.4%
|
8.2%
|
19.1%
|
5.5%
|
10.1%
|
23.9%
|
Rental..!
The
markets which saw the most rental increase were Pune, Bangalore and Kolkata,
with rental increases of 8.6%, 5.2% and 4.2% respectively.
The rentals in the
other markets remained stable.
Yield..!
Office yields remain unchanged from last year
at 9.6% pan-India.
The story remains the same across all major markets.
Outlook..!
With recovery definitely underway, many
micro-markets across the country are expected to become landlord favouring. The
actual vibrancy on ground is felt even more since GLV is higher than the net
absorption by 15% to 20%.
With a healthy space demand list on hand from various
corporates, it is going to be hard for corporates to find the right assets at
the right location in 2015.
The
increase in corporate profitability, corporate confidence and economic growth
will continue to result in headcount growth and expansionary leasing activity
across most markets in 2015.
While
challenges still exist, the forecasts for
2015 and 2016 projects considerable increase in office take-up when compared to
2012 and 2013. We expect only 22 million square feet of office space to be ready at the right
locations against the demand forecast of 30-32 million square feet in 2015.
Therefore,
rental and capital values will continue to grow.
Investment
volumes are expected to go up in 2015, driven by low risk cross-border capital.
Overall, the investment market will do better in 2015, with a substantial
weight of capital targeting office real estate (especially Grade A and trophy
assets).
Strong
investor demand for prime office assets, drop in interest rates and the lack of
new supply of core investment options in the primary markets will result in
yield compression.
About the author..
By Mr. Ramesh Nair is COO – Business & International Director at JLL India
For media
Contact
Arun
Chitnis
Head
– Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL
India, Pune - 411001.
TelE: 020 3093 0441 Fax: 020 4019 6101
Mob: +91 96571 29999
TelE: 020 3093 0441 Fax: 020 4019 6101
Mob: +91 96571 29999
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