Housing Sales During
The Indian Festive Season..
by Mr. Akshit Shah, JLL India
Typically, residential property
sales are slow in the first half of the year. The first quarter coincides with
school exams, during which family decision makers tend to steer clear of major
disruptions in the schedule. In the third quarter, sales also tend to be
subdued because of the monsoon season and Pitru Paksh, which is considered an
inauspicious period for new beginnings.
Sales are usually expected to pick
up in the fourth quarter, because this time of the year brings with it various
festivals which are considered auspicious for purchasing a new house. With a
visible increase in new launches and marketing activity, the fourth quarter
should be contributing a significantly bigger share to the annual absorption of
residential units. However, the primary residential absorption numbers of the
past few years tell a different story:
Source: Real Estate Intelligence
Service, JLL India
A look at the demand for residential
real estate during the past five years shows that, contrary to the general
perception that a majority of sales happen in the second half of a year, the
absorption is largely the same in both halves. A weighted average of the past
five years shows that the first quarter attracts the highest number of deals at
27%, while the fourth quarter (i.e. the festive season) attracts 25%, which is
at par with the average.
The hypothesis that residential
property sales pick up markedly during the festive season was valid in the
pre-2010 period, but it does not hold water today. This is because of the
following reasons:
The average age of home buyers has
come down from the mid-50s to the mid-20s. The younger generation prefers to
take informed decisions and focuses on better bargaining opportunities rather
than auspicious days to purchase property.
The service industry is growing
rapidly, and now contributes over 55% of India’s GDP. A larger part of this
industry announces salary hikes and bonuses in the second quarter. The
manufacturing and trading industry, on the other hand, announces bonuses during
Diwali - which falls in the fourth quarter.
Many people belonging to the
upper-middle and high-income groups plan their investments during the first
quarter, for effective tax management purposes.
In short, the trend has changed, and
the seasonal impact on housing demand is a thing of the past. If the first half
of the year has not seen good business, it is quite futile to expect the
remaining half to compensate for the deficit. In any year where such a scenario
has played out, it does not make sense for developers to bank on the festive
season to bring a significant change in fortunes.
Mr. Akshit Shah is AVP (Capital Markets Research) at JLL India
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