A New Chapter Opens for
Indian Luxury Housing..!
by Mr. Ashwinder
Raj Singh, CEO – Residential Services, JLL India
The residential real
estate sector in India has had its ups and downs for two years now. Negative
news about real estate seem to be all the rage with the media these days.
Luxury real estate, in particular, has been getting very bad press of late. Let
us take a quick look at what is really happening on the ground, and what is
driving it:
· India's
GDP growth for FY'17 has been pegged at 7.1%. The number of Indian ultra-HNIs
jumped to 2 lakh in 2015 from 1.84 lakh in 2014; it currently stands at 2.36
lakh and is expected to reach 483,800 by 2025. India is currently home to the
world's fourth-largest population of millionaires in Asia Pacific region.
· GDP
per capita income in India is USD $2000 and will increase to USD $3500 by 2020.
Higher incomes naturally translate into a higher appetite for luxury housing.
Meanwhile, prices of luxury housing have corrected post demonetisation. They
will not fall further, but the luxury homes buyer segment - including NRIs - is
keenly aware that this is an optimal time to invest.
· The
Indian real estate market will almost double to $180 billion by 2020 from the
$93 billion it accounted for in 2014, thereby accounting for 13% of the GDP
compared to the current 5-6%. Luxury housing constitutes almost 4-5% of the
total real estate market and with overall pie increasing, share of luxury
housing is bound to increase
India is a constantly
growing, developing country, and its housing deficit is the stuff of legends.
Currently at around 17.5 million units, most of the deficit is in affordable
housing - meaning very low-priced homes to house the bulk of the country's
homeless or those living in informal housing such as slums. This is the segment
where demand is the highest.
The Mid-Income Housing
Story..!
Mid-income housing - or
housing that caters to the better-off middle class - also sees a lot of demand,
but such housing needs to be in good locations with sufficient infrastructure,
priced right and within reasonable completion timelines to attract the latent
demand.
The oversupply that exists in this segment is largely because many
projects have fallen short of a few or all of these fronts.
Given the huge pent-up
demand for mid-income housing, this supply will eventually be absorbed - excess
supply is usually measured in the number of months it will take for it to be
sold. In most Indian cities, there is excess supply in this segment because
most of the demand is from end-users, not investors.
There is a basic lesson
here that Indian developers were slow to learn, and by the time they woke up to
it, they were saddled with a lot of very slow-selling inventory. The lesson is
that investors are no longer a major force on the residential market - most
markets are primarily driven by actual buyers.
The previous boom years
had seen a lot of real estate speculation happening. Investors were literally
bulk-buying into cheap under-construction housing projects in hot emerging
development corridors. Their intention was to buy cheap and sell at
considerable profit when the projects were complete, the locations picked up
and demand for homes there rose. Developers had gotten quite used to this
phenomenon, and launched housing projects at breakneck speed.
The Luxury Housing Story..!
At the height of India's
initially exuberant Infotech boom, luxury housing was also in great demand.
Young software professionals, seduced by unnaturally fat salary packages, took
massive home loans from banks and bought into fancy homes with all the trimmings
and accoutrements of a wealthy, enabled lifestyle. Their managers and CEOs went
in for even fancier abodes, again heavily leveraged through loans. Stock market
speculators, also riding high on the waves of massive profits, were not far
behind.
NRIs drawing
astronomical salaries or running successful businesses abroad were constantly
raking money into luxury homes back in India. Not surprisingly, investors were
snapping up luxury condos as fast as developers could churn them
out.
Then came the Dotcom
bust, and the global economic meltdown after Lehman Brothers collapsed - and
things were never quite the same again. India's economy took a series of
crippling hits. Software techies saw their salaries shrink, stock market
profits evaporated, jobs became scarce and a large chunk of hitherto prosperous
NRIs were struggling to stay afloat in their countries of residence.
Back in India,
developers of luxury housing took a very long time to wake up and smell the
coffee. The rollercoaster ride was over, but that fact was hard for them to
digest and even harder for them to act on - the news was just too grim to take
seriously. Luxury housing involved fat profit margins which they didn't really
want to say good bye to. However, the writing was on the wall - mass investor
bookings in luxury projects were now a thing of the past.
And if that wasn't
enough, Narendra Modi demonetized the most circulated high-value currencies in
October 2016. Luxury housing had almost always involved a lot of cash in the
transactions, making it an ideal place to park unaccounted cash.
However...
· Almost
45,000 luxury residential units were launched in FY'16 in the top 9 cities,
constituting almost 21% of total residential launches. Bengaluru leads with 30%
of luxury home launches, followed by Mumbai with 17% of luxury home launches.
· Bengaluru
also leads with almost 29% of total luxury home sales in FY'16, followed by
Mumbai with 16% of sales and Pune coming third with 15% of sales. In total,
47,000 luxury units were sold in top 9 cities, making up 17% of the total
residential sales in the country.
Evidently, the
much-hyped gloom and doom story is vastly exaggerated. The fact that media
stories which predicted that luxury housing in India was finished ignored is
that luxury housing caters to a specific segment of demand which, like the
demand for budget and mid-income housing, has not gone away. India's wealthier
homebuyers still want high-class homes with all the bells and whistles of
sophistication in great locations.
Unlike affordable and
mid-income housing, the market for luxury homes is not driven so much by home
loans as by personal wealth. Where home loans are involved in such housing,
they are backed by sizeable down payments and fully-assured repayment power.
Nobody who is not confident of his or her ability to see such a transaction to
successful completion will even considering such a purchase today. Also,
investors active in this segment operate within a fail-proof inner circle of
well-heeled clients for whom the question is not 'if', but 'what', 'how much'
and 'when'.
The market for luxury
homes continues to thrive within the specific segment of discerning, affluent
buyers who continue to looking for nothing but the best.
About the author..
Mr. Ashwinder Raj Singh, CEO – Residential Services, JLL India
For media contact
Head - Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL India
Level 6, Amar Avinash Corporate Plaza
Bund Garden Road,
Pune 411001.
Tel: (020) 40196100 Fax: (020) 40196101
Mob: 91 9657129999
Website: www.joneslanglasalle.co.in
Blog: www.joneslanglasalleblog.com/realestatecompass
JLL India
Level 6, Amar Avinash Corporate Plaza
Bund Garden Road,
Pune 411001.
Tel: (020) 40196100 Fax: (020) 40196101
Mob: 91 9657129999
Website: www.joneslanglasalle.co.in
Blog: www.joneslanglasalleblog.com/realestatecompass
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