Millennium Post

Realty hit hard by note ban, awaits ‘white money’ buyers

Developers are estimated to have incurred revenue loss of Rs 22,600 crore while state government­s suffered a notional loss on stamp duty of Rs 1,200 crore

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NEW DELHI: Property market, long considered a black money safe haven, seems to have taken a big hit from demonetisa­tion, with developers seeing their sales drop by about 50 per cent in the last three months and now pinning their hopes on buyers coming to market with 'white money'.

The genuine buyers in the residentia­l market, on the other hand, appear to be holding back their purchase plans on hopes that the interest rates would fall further and the property prices would plunge post demonetisa­tion, which some see as a ‘cleansing' of a sector infested with illicit funds. As per the data, the secondary or resale market, where maximum black money typically gets parked, has been worstaffec­ted as transactio­ns almost dried up, barring some interest in marque properties, due to paucity of cash after scrapping of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes.

The registrati­on of properties also saw a decline. In the process, developers are estimated to have incurred a revenue loss of Rs 22,600 crore because of the cash ban while state government­s suffered a notional loss on stamp duty of Rs 1,200 crore, as per property consultant Knight Frank India.

Top officials of several developers across the country –from Chennai to Kolkata, from Hyderabad to Pune and Mumbai to Bengaluru and entire national capital region – admitted that the market took a big hit post demonetisa­tion though they foresee significan­t long-term gains, expecting all future deals to be through banking channels.

However, many developers and property consultant­s also said it is too early to say that black money has been completely eliminated from the sector though it has become exceedingl­y difficult to execute cash transactio­ns as of now.

They feel that demonetisa­tion, along with the new real estate regulatory Act and the Benami Properties Act, would help in eradicatin­g the practice of parking black money in real estate to a great extent and improve the industry's image.

States are yet to revise guidance values or circle rates post demonetisa­tion, but may have to soon consider lowering the rates to reflect market sentiment. “Property sale, in both primary and secondary markets, were affected during November-december due to demonetisa­tion as consumers postponed their buying decisions not only in real estate but across all the sectors,” realtors' apex body CREDAI president Getamber Anand said.

Sales in the primary market have started to improve, with banks lowering interest rates on home loans, he said, adding that it will take some time for revival in the secondary market where buyers need to reengineer investment strategy.

Top developer DLF'S CEO Rajeev Talwar said the real effect of demonetisa­tion will be that secondary sales would also become like primary sales and transactio­ns will happen through banking channels.

“Real estate will become totally transparen­t,” he added.

According to Knight Frank, which tracks primary residentia­l market of eight big cities, housing sales fell by 44 per cent during October-december 2016 at nearly 41,000 units compared with the year-ago period while new launches dropped by 61 per cent.

The Delhi-ncr mar- ket, which was already facing demand slowdown and huge delays in project completion, saw maximum fall in housing sales during October-december at 53 per cent. Mumbai saw 50 per cent decline in fourth quarter sales, Bengaluru 45 per cent, Ahmedabad 43 per cent, Hyderabad 40 per cent, Pune 35 per cent, Chennai 31 per cent and Kolkata 20 per cent.

The fall could have been steeper but for high festive sales in October, days before the demonetisa­tion was effected.

“The Indian government's demonetisa­tion move on November 8 brought the market to a complete standstill. Against this backdrop, developers refrained from announcing any new launches and buyers turned extremely cautious before committing on purchases,” the Knight Frank India report said.

Bengaluru-based Sobha, the only company to have reported its sales bookings for the October-december quarter so far, said that its sales bookings fell by 22 per cent at Rs 373.2 crore against Rs 478.3 crore in the year-ago period.

On the impact on the secondary market, Knight Frank's Samantak Das said: “Resale market is under tremendous pressure after the demonetisa­tion move. Besides, traction for some marque properties, there were hardly any transactio­ns,” he said. “It will take 2-3 quarters for the resale market to witness some uptick in sales. The deals will be much more transparen­t now,” he said.

Asked whether black money in realty will be completely eliminated post notes ban, CBRE Chairman (IndiaSouth East Asia) Anshuman Magazine said: “While it is still too early to gauge the full impact of the demonetisa­tion drive, we believe that it is a bold step towards bringing in transparen­cy into the sector and boosting consumer sentiment and investment­s in sector.”

JLL India's newly-appointed Country Head Ramesh Nair feels that it cannot be said with certainty that the problem of black money has been completely eliminated from the sector.

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