Why Indian Real Estate Attracts Only A
Marginal Share of the Global Capital Inflows?
Out of the
more than USD 610 billion global capital inflows into real estate seen in 2016,
India got a measly sum of ~USD 6.6 billion or 1%; lack of industry depth to blame
by Mr. Ramesh Nair, JLL India
It makes for a telling revelation that considering the
11,500 developers under the CREDAI (Confederation of Real Estate Developers’
Associations of India) umbrella, the number of developers who have consistently
delivered projects across all three phases of the Indian residential real
estate cycle over a 11-year period stands at a measly 124.
As per sold out
year/construction complete (Residential)
|
2005-2008
|
2009-2011
|
2012-2016
|
Across all three phases*
|
Number of developers
|
308
|
647
|
852
|
124
|
Source: JLL
Research
In percentage terms, it comes to just 1% and starkly
exposes the lack of depth in India’s realty market. These stats also reinforce
the justification behind recent policy-level interventions such as RERA [Real
Estate (Regulation & Development)] and demonetisation. The sector
definitely needs a shot of corporate governance and better industry practices.
A vibrant real estate industry with greater degree of
transparency will bode well for future fund flows. On the back of higher
transparency and corporate governance, many more developers will be able to
attract private equity funding. Not only will this turnaround show the
confidence in our real estate industry but will also help developers tide over
the liquidity crisis seen in recent years.
Out of the global capital inflows into real estate of
more than USD 610 billion in 2016, India’s realty got a measly sum of ~USD 6.6
billion. This comes to 1% and is due to the lack of depth in India’s real
estate industry as also its highly-fragmented nature. PE funds have had to
struggle with finding the right partners, and in recent times, their focus has
changed to quality of partners instead of IRR (Internal Rate of Return).
Only a few developers in India have been able to
attract private equity over the years. In order to attract investments,
developers need to have high levels of integrity, quality of assets,
appropriate capital structure, experienced management teams, high levels of
corporate governance and better financial and budgetary controls.
The table below illustrates how a majority of today’s
developers entered the business, 2012 onwards. Many others have been in this
business for barely a decade. The market conditions are challenging for many,
especially those with a poor track record. A lack of fiscal prudence,
over-indulgence in land-banking and a lower degree of customer need analysis
with the associated failure to fulfil promises by some developers has dealt a
blow to the entire industry’s credibility and caused a wider trust deficit between
them and buyers.
As per launch
year/construction start (Residential)
|
2005-2008
|
2009-2011
|
2012-2016
|
Across all three phases*
|
Number of developers
|
748
|
853
|
1621
|
240
|
Source: JLL
Research
Going forward, however, increased consolidation and
transparency is expected to boost foreign and domestic investor participation
like never before. This will be a win-win situation for the developer community
as well as PE funds. The industry, then, would be able to get a higher share of
the global capital inflows, which bodes well for its future.
The developer community, on its part, would have to
invest in building brands, forge partnerships and set up full-fledged teams to
manage investor relationships. The stock exchange-listed players should also
maintain the highest ethical standards while trading in their own stock,
deciding on compensation structure for directors, reducing outstanding
litigations and retention of key management personnel.
*The three phases witnessed by Indian
real estate sector
India’s property market growth cycle can
be divided into three phases: The rapid growth witnessed from 2005 to 2008; the
post-GFC (global financial crisis) period between 2009 and 2011, and the
current phase of plateaued growth starting from the year 2012.
About the author..
Mr.Ramesh Nair, COO – Business & International Director, JLL India
For media Contact
Arun
Chitnis
Head –
Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL
India
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