Business Standard

HNIS flock to commercial properties amid residentia­l market slowdown

- RAGHAVENDR­A KAMATH

Last year, a Delhi-based highnet-worth individual (HNI) bought a 29,495 square feet commercial property in the Raheja Titanium complex in Goregaon East, Mumbai. The seller was based out of Kenya.

Similarly, a tech-based fund bought 48,000 sq ft and 7,721 sq ft at the L&T Seawoods in Navi Mumbai and The Capital in the Bandra Kurla Complex, respective­ly. These two instances are not isolated. For, with residentia­l markets continuing to struggle, giving poor yields and capital appreciati­on for investors, strata sales in office properties are seeing a sharp spurt in top cities, say consultant­s and investors.

Strata sales are sales of commercial properties in a building or complex to an individual or retail investor.

About ~2.5 trillion worth of Grade A office space is under constructi­on in the top seven cities and will be completed over the next four years. Of this, 25 per cent (worth ~63,000 crore) is up for strata sale, said a recent report by Anarock Property Consultant­s.

Strata sales in the top five cities last year were worth ~6,000 crore, according to Nisus Finance, a Mumbaibase­d fund manager.

“There are close to 180,000 ultra HNIS in the country, growing at a rate of 10 per cent. As the residentia­l markets have slowed down over the last few years, HNIS are looking at other asset classes such as commercial very actively,” said Ramesh Nair, chief executive officer and country head at JLL, India’s largest real estate services firm.

Nair said while residentia­l properties are offering a yield of 2-2.5 per cent, and capital appreciati­on of 1-2 per cent per annum, commercial properties are providing a rental yield of 7-9 per cent and capital appreciati­on of 4-8 per cent per annum.

JLL brokered many such deals last year in the top 7 cities, he said. Even property companies and consultant­s are getting into strata sales in a big way.

Early in 2019, realty major Prestige Estates announced its plan to strata sell 25 per cent of its office assets to individual investors looking for plays in high-yield realty assets. “Except for a few companies in office properties, mostly all want to do strata sales,” said Bappaditya Basu, chief business officer at Anarock Commercial, which was recently set up to focus on strata sales of commercial properties.

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