IT Office Absorption Increases By
10%, Lease Transactions Up By 52%
Bengaluru and Hyderabad together recorded more than 50% of
this total pan-India IT space take-up
by Mr. Ramesh Nair – CEO
& Country Head, JLL India
IT, ITeS occupiers have taken a big leap in office lease
transactions in the last 15 years. Office space demand from them increased from
1.4 million sqft in 2001 to 15.2 million sqft in 2015.
With 16.81 mn sqft area transacted in 2016, it
translates to a 10% increase (y-o-y). Interestingly, Bengaluru and Hyderabad
together recorded more than 50% of this total pan-India IT space take-up.
Notably, the transaction sizes are becoming smaller – the average
area leased was slightly over 31,200 sqft in 2015, but went lower than 27,000
sqft in 2016.
In percentage terms, this is a reduction of 14% (y-o-y) and
implies that developers need to be ready for designing business parks for
smaller requirements. Their focus should change from quantity to quality of
tenants.
The number of lease transactions saw a 52% growth (y-o-y), going
up from 414 in 2015 to 628 in 2016. Back in 2001, there were only 19 IT leasing
transactions.
Last year, most of the transactions were recorded in the tech hubs
of Bengaluru and Hyderabad (see map below) while micro-markets preferred by IT
players across Delhi-NCR, Chennai, Mumbai, and Pune also saw a good number of
transactions.
The growing transaction numbers indicate that IT companies which
previously preferred built-to-suit office complexes increasingly prefer to
lease offices which offer flexibility.
Earlier, many Indian IT firms, especially the bigger ones like
Infosys and TCS, preferred constructing their own campuses. Now, as the client
contracts of many of these companies get shorter, they prefer to lease.
Many IT firms in India have followed the principle of ‘one dollar
real estate cost’ and typically lease quality spaces that charge rents below
INR 65 (=USD
1) per sqft per month.
The top seven cities in the country have been providing spaces to
accommodate this strategy. Industry body NASSCOM forecasts that the IT-BPO
sector will account for 10% of India’s GDP by 2020 and create ~30 million
direct and indirect jobs.
Indian cities are heavily dependent on IT/ITeS for job generation
and office space demand. A look at REIS data (see below) shows how much the
major cities rely on this key sector to drive job growth, as well as commercial
and residential property demand.
Last year, however, the pace of growth of top technology firms was
in single digits due to global uncertainty and technological disruption. The
office space requirements of technology and outsourcing firms – particularly
those engaged in software development – also slowed down.
Source: JLL REIS [Data as of 1Q 2017]
There is a fear that leasing by IT companies could plateau out due
to clients’ digital transformation, automation, artificial intelligence and
protectionism due to a tighter visa regime under the current US government
which could force IT firms to tread more cautiously going forward.
Hiring could slow down, and more jobs currently offshored to
countries like India may return to the US. Another school of thought is that
this could lead to an increase in office take-up by these companies as they
look to accommodate more employees returning to India.
This is also an opportunity for tech companies to scale up efforts
in emerging technologies, reskill their teams, become innovative and agile and
focus more on translating business needs of clients into software features.
Doing so would increase their strategic relevance for their clients.
It remains to be seen how the hitherto resilient Indian
Infotech sector, which has successfully weathered storms like the Asian
currency crisis in 1997, the Dotcom crash in 2001 and the global financial
crisis in 2008, will react.
About the author
Mr. Ramesh Nair – CEO & Country Head, JLL India
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