Business Standard

Pain ahead for realty, housing finance players

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mortgages are taken out by people who will never get possession of a flat.

The problem here is, there are two loans being taken against one surety and one notional surety (an unbuilt flat). There are variations of this malpractic­e where two loans can be taken out against the same single surety. For example, the developer may take a loan to build a project and also pre-sell the unbuilt homes to people who take out mortgages (and pay EMIs themselves). Here too, if the builder goes bankrupt, there will be many lenders laying claim to both the real estate and to (unbuilt) flats.

Similar stories will unfold with other real estate developers who are debt-stressed, given the multitude of unfinished projects. New regulation­s like RERA may lead to less in the way of such absurditie­s, but the overhang of such malpractic­es will continue to plague the sector for a long time, given that Indian court processes are very slow. Whatever the courts decide, lenders and borrowers will both lose a lot of capital during this process, not to mention opportunit­y costs.

If market forces work, this real estate will eventually be seized and auctioned at massive discounts, and the unbuilt or half-built flats will perhaps, be completed. That could be a decade later. This process could cause a crash in real estate prices - that could cascade into problems for other projects where builders find they can't get the prices they need. Or there may be a segregatio­n where projects completed on time get a premium while “zombie” projects die.

What does this mean for real estate stocks and the mortgage market? A few more such instances could result in downgrades across developer stocks. Mortgages constitute around 20 per cent of annual credit expansion and it’s the major revenue stream for many of India's best NBFCs. It’s a big enough pain-point and politicall­y sensitive enough for emergency policy action. But it’s anyone’s guess if there will be a bailout and if so, what sort of bailout. It could be a waitand-watch situation for investors.

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