Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Apollo to lend to Indian cos, bet $1 bn on realty

- feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Apollo Global Management Inc. plans to lend about $1 billion to developers in India this year, betting on a recovery in the residentia­l property market as the pandemic eases.

That’s up from the $750 million that Apollo lent to Indian developers last year, with twothirds of that sum directed to residentia­l projects, according to Nipun Sahni, a partner at the private equity firm.

About 70% of this year’s lending will go to home builders and the rest to commercial developers.

“The market volumes are back to pre-covid level and in some markets it’s higher than 2019,” Sahni said in an interview. “It is consolidat­ing rapidly, with the number of unsold homes in India at 10-year low, which is a sign that prices can have an uptick.”

India’s housing market saw a strong rebound from the depths of the coronaviru­s pandemic as low interest rates and discounts by developers fueled demand. Low inventory levels will likely sustain the boom in residentia­l property market where prices could rise as much as 10% across the nation’s top six cities, according to a Crisil Ratings Ltd. report on May 10.

The country’s office property is benefiting from more hiring in startups, thanks to the increasing number of initial public offerings and the expansion in the technology industry overall, Sahni said.

Apollo, which opened its Mumbai office in 2008, currently manages about $513 billion of assets globally, according to its website. The firm began lending to Indian property developers in 2017.

A year later, shadow banks like IL&FS Investment Managers Ltd. and Dewan Housing Finance Corp. ran into troubles, leading to dislocatio­n in the local credit market. Apollo stepped in, increasing its lending activity. When financing demand grew during the pandemic, the business took off, Sahni said.

The private equity firm plans to hire two more bankers this year to beef up its 12-person team at the real estate arm in India, he said.

“We have the appetite to continue investing and capitalize on the dislocatio­n in the financing markets in India,” the partner said. Apollo’s average loan size will be between $40 million and $60 million, he said.

The war in Ukraine and supply chain issues could potentiall­y weigh on India’s property market.

The country’s central bank earlier this month surprised investors with an interest rate hike, draining liquidity from the banking system, with Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikant­a Das citing persistent inflation pressures..”

 ?? HT ?? About 70% of this year’s lending will go to home builders and the rest to commercial developers.
HT About 70% of this year’s lending will go to home builders and the rest to commercial developers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India