Business Standard

Thane land deal raises prospects for Oberoi Realty

The ~555-crore pact with GSK Pharma came at a steep discount

- RAM PRASAD SAHU

On a day the markets fell for the second consecutiv­e session, Mumbai-based Oberoi Realty was up three per cent after the company acquired a 60-acre land parcel in Thane (total saleable area of 8.3 million square feet) for ~550 crore from Glaxo Smith Kline Pharma. The pharma multinatio­nal’s stock ended flat.

The reason for investors’ interest in Oberoi Realty is the steep discount of the deal and growth visibility it gets with the acquisitio­n. The latest deal values the per acre price at under ~9.3 crore, while the circle rate and recent transactio­ns peg it closer to ~30 crore. JM Financial’s Abhishek Anand said the reason for this was the size of the land parcel, lack of key approvals and higher regulatory costs.

What made Oberoi undertake such a move was that, unlike the more leveraged players, the company’s balance sheet is strong with debt to-equity of 0.1 times, which allows it to go for large outright purchases. Further, given that the land in question has not received clearance from the urban land ceiling Act, and that conversion from industrial to residentia­l use might take over a year, it may have been a spoiler for other bidders. Lack of significan­t price increases and higher regulatory costs (premium floor space index charges; up 35 per cent over the last four years) could be the other reasons for the discounted deal. But, Oberoi with its track record seems better-placed to deliver.

The key triggers for Oberoi over the next year, according to HDFC Securities, are higher sales from its Mulund project, launch of Goregaon phase-III and subsequent phases of the Borivali project. Moreover, a sharp reduction in property supply is expected with the implementa­tion of the real estate regulation Act and should benefit organised players such as Oberoi. In this context, the increased supply, given its execution track record (projects reaching final stages), could be a competitiv­e advantage.

The Thane land is expected to add ~40 per share, if Oberoi is able to get realisatio­ns of ~14,000 per square feet (~60 per share at ~16,000 per square feet). JM Financial’s Anand cautioned the high inventory levels (expected to take 3035 months to sell at the current rate) in the Thane micro-market will be a key execution risk, which coupled with delay in approvals, will extend the execution timeline.

Overall, given the growth visibility over the next few years, most brokerages have a ‘ buy’ rating and could change their targets once the Thane land sale process is completed.

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