Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Realty sector under pressure and outlook is pessimisti­c, says survey

- Madhurima Nandy madhurima.n@htlive.com ■

BENGALURU: Despite a slew of measures by the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to boost liquidity and revive demand, the real estate sector is under immense pressure and the outlook is pessimisti­c, according to the Real Estate Sentiment Index Q3 2019, the latest survey by Knight Frank, FICCI and NAREDCO.

The current sentiment of the real estate stakeholde­rs on the supply side, including developers, private equity funds, banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) plummeted further in the July-September quarter, reflecting uncertaint­y that was witnessed during demonetiza­tion in 2016.

“The real estate stakeholde­rs’ sentiment has gone in the ‘pessimisti­c’ zone owing to poor demand side performanc­e, despite measures by the government. However, it is more significan­t that they are wary about the next six months for the sector and the overall economy, thus pushing the sentiment score in the red,” said Shishir Baijal, chairman and managing director of Knight Frank India.

The real estate sentiment index is based on a quarterly survey of key supply-side stakeholde­rs.

A score of over 50 signifies ‘Optimism’ in sentiment, 50 means sentiment is ‘Same’ or ‘Neutral’, while below 50 shows ‘Pessimism’. For the July-September quarter, the current sentiment score was 42, while the future sentiment score was at an all-time low of 49.

The real estate industry has witnessed over three years now and stakeholde­rs see no immediate solution for the sector ailed by defaults, weak demand and the drying up of funding because of the NBFC crisis.

“The restricted flow of liquidity has resulted in many real estate projects being stuck in the past one year due to lack of funds. The realisatio­n that the slowdown in the economy will further weaken the demand and in turn impact cash flow issues for the developers has marred the outlook of the stakeholde­rs for the coming six months,” the survey said.

“Affordable housing projects that have got the equation right in terms of unit size, product configurat­ion, location and developer standing are witnessing good demand even during this time. Within the residentia­l spectrum, the stress has mounted up on the high-end segment in the recent period and that is one segment where sales have been slow,” said Keki Mistry, vice-chairman and CEO, HDFC Ltd.

Approximat­ely, 26 developers in NCR have come under the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) in the past few months.

The sentiment score for the western region has also gone in the red for the first time.

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