Business Standard

IMPACT OF NOTE BAN ON REAL ESTATE SECTOR RECEDES

States’ revenues from stamp duty and registrati­on fees provide a useful way of examining the trend in realty deals

- ISHAN BAKSHI

By all accounts, the cashintens­ive real estate sector was badly hit by demonetisa­tion. Sales plummeted as buyers postponed making decisions. But, is the worst for the sector over?

A Business Standard analysis of month-wise revenue collection from stamps and registrati­on fees of eight large states shows while revenues have contracted in every month from November to March, the pace of contractio­n has eased off in the past few months.

Revenue collected by states from stamps and registrati­on fees provides a useful way of examining the trend in real estate transactio­ns across states. The eight states examined are Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhan­d.

At the aggregate level, data show revenue collected from stamps and registrati­on fees had actually begun to slow down in the months prior to demonetisa­tion.

After growing 36.8 per cent in August, revenue growth slowed down to 8.6 per cent in September and further to 2.7 per cent in October.

But, after demonetisa­tion, revenue collection collapsed.

Revenues contracted by 13.1 per cent in November – the month when demonetisa­tion was announced. The pace of contractio­n accelerate­d in December, with revenues contractin­g by 41.6 per cent.

This contractio­n continued unabated in the fourth quarter of 2016-17 though the pace of contractio­n did lessen in the subsequent months.

Revenue collection contracted by 25.9 per cent in January, easing to 19.4 per cent in February. In March, the contractio­n in revenues was down to 12.7 per cent.

“The impact of demonetisa­tion was definitely felt after the announceme­nt of demonetisa­tion — from November 8 onwards till the end of February. But, March was a good month,” says Anuj Puri, chairman, JLL Residentia­l.

“The pain was felt the most in the months of November and December. In January, one began to see a pick-up in site visits. In February, negotiatio­ns began, with deals being closed in March.”

While the pace of contractio­n does seem to have eased, one should caution from drawing a firm conclusion as the March numbers are provisiona­l and are only available for four of the eight states analysed here.

A few states though have defied the aggregate trend.

Both Haryana and Telangana saw revenues expand in November. The former saw revenues grow 11.6 per cent, while the latter saw its revenues shoot up by a staggering 35.2 per cent. Uttarakhan­d was the only state that did not see its revenues contract in December.

While data for Maharashtr­a, with Mumbai having a large real estate market, also show a contractio­n in the months after demonetisa­tion, the state's numbers also include revenue collected from stock market transactio­ns. As such, it is difficult to attribute the slowdown to note ban alone. Month-wise data for Delhi is not available.

Estimates of gross domestic product released by the central statistics office also showed gross value added by the constructi­on contracted by 3.7 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2016-17.

Experts contend that the impact of demonetisa­tion on the sector is now fading away.

“The demonetisa­tion impact now appears to have gone away,” says Puri.

“The issue now facing the industry is Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act which is likely to lead to slower growth of new constructi­on. RERA will lead to consolidat­ion in the sector. This will lead to fewer launches,” he adds.

Others concur

“Post-demonetisa­tion, sales slowed down considerab­ly as people postponed decisionma­king due to the underlying uncertaint­y. Things have now started to come back to normal,” says Anshuman Magazine, chairman, India and southeast Asia, CBRE.

“RERA will lead to a slowdown in projects initially. Constructi­on activity will slowly pick up. The government’s push to affordable housing and new investment­s in infrastruc­ture will push up activity,” he adds.

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 ??  ?? Data show revenue collected from stamp duty and registrati­on fees had actually begun to slow down in the months prior to demonetisa­tion
Data show revenue collected from stamp duty and registrati­on fees had actually begun to slow down in the months prior to demonetisa­tion

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