The pan-India Office Vacancy - To Rise Marginally in 2017
by Mr. Ramesh Nair, JLL India
The pan-India office
vacancy in 2016, at 15%, was the lowest in eight years. On the back of
positive office space demand from sectors like manufacturing, logistics, FMCG,
consulting firms, etc., the year saw a record low vacancy largely driven by IT
cities such as Bengaluru, Pune and Hyderabad – each of which saw vacancy in
single digits.
The sharpest reduction in pan-India office vacancy was seen
between 2013 and 2016 when it went from 18.5% to 15%.
Source: JLL REIS
Vacancy in Bengaluru has
reduced from 14.5% in 2010 to 3.8% in 2016.
Chennai’s vacancy has come down
from 32% in 2010 to 11% today.
Hyderabad has also seen its vacancy reduce from
15.5% in 2009 to 9% in 2016.
Similarly, in Pune, vacancy has reduced from 17%
in 2009 to 5.5% today. The pan-India vacancy is forecasted to increase
marginally this year and remain range bound until the year 2019.
Even as India’s office
real estate is set to be the biggest gainer among asset classes – thanks to
steady demand, rising GDP and launching of REITs in the next one or two
quarters – availability of right space at right location remains a challenge
for many occupiers looking for grade-A offices, especially the ones looking for
superior grade-A office space.
The latter have been facing a challenge in recent
times due to the ongoing space crunch.
As vacancy reduces
across key cities, the supply of good quality assets continues to diminish.
Vacancy in higher quality assets is far lower than the average city-level
vacancies.
Assets poorer in quality or at inferior locations or strata-sold (in
Delhi-NCR and Mumbai), have a much higher vacancy, except in the IT cities like
Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad and Chennai.
The net absorption in
2018 is forecast to be lower than this year due to scarce supply, and this is
likely to be acute in Chennai and Pune.
Thanks to more investment in
infrastructure, cities such as Pune, Hyderabad and Chennai are expected to
drive office demand in 2017.
As a result, rents, will
grow in even in Grade-B buildings too and certain micro-markets. The pace of
growth in rents will not be the same across cities and micro-markets as they
may have run their course already.
Due to RERA, REITs and demonetisation, more
and more office assets are expected to start getting institutionalized and
demand for strata-sales is set to decline, especially in Delhi-NCR and Mumbai.
While some developers
with a portfolio mix of commercial and residential developments are focusing
more on building commercial assets, a select few have reportedly moved their
focus entirely towards the commercial asset class.
Certain other players in the
real estate sector have been aggressively building up their commercial portfolios
in the country in anticipation of REITs. India’s growing stock of grade-A
commercial assets presents great opportunities for REITs.
About the author
Mr. Ramesh Nair
CEO & Country Head, JLL India
For media contact
Arun Chitnis
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
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
No comments:
Post a Comment